Listly by Tobin Smith
JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon doesn’t see any reason the nine-year economic recovery will end soon.
It felt like a body blow for stocks on May 24 when Donald Trump’s cancellation of talks with Kim Jong Un sent the S&P 500 down a quick 1 percent. But by session’s end, the loss had shrunk by three-quarters.
Northern Trust’s Bob Browne says the Federal Reserve will be constrained from raising rates as fast as the market expects.
Money is pouring into the economy and in turn helping provide support for the otherwise struggling stock market. If current conditions persist, corporations are likely this year to inject more than $2.5 trillion into what UBS strategists term 'flow.'
Jerry Morales, the mayor of Midland, Texas, and a local restaurateur, is being whipsawed by the latest Permian Basin shale-oil boom.
BI PRIME: John Hussman, the outspoken investor and former professor who has been predicting a stock market crash, shares his thoughts on what he calls an 'economic Ponzi scheme' and breaks down what will be different about the next meltdown.
BI PRIME: When the next market crash occurs, Americans on Main Street will have much bigger problems on the horizon than stock losses. Multiple experts agree that one particularly troublesome development could destabilize the economic environment if a bear market unfolds.
BI PRIME: When the next market crash occurs, Americans on Main Street will have much bigger problems on the horizon than stock losses. Multiple experts agree that one particularly troublesome development could destabilize the economic environment if a bear market unfolds.
BI PRIME: Jim Paulsen, the chief investment strategist at Leuthold Group, argues that one under-the-radar economic indicator could be the key to making the right decision about when to sell stocks.
While the losses landing on technology stocks over the last few days feel sudden, they weren’t completely without warning.
Are cracks finally appearing in tech's dominance? Canaccord thinks so.
The economic expansion that began in mid-2009 and already ranks as the second-longest in American history most likely will end in 2020 as the Fed raises interest rates to cool off an overheating economy, according to forecasters surveyed by The Wall Street Journal.