After serving as the driving force for a blistering market rise, the so-called Magnificent Seven have taken an epic stumble in 2025.
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Goldman Sachs’ $4.6 billion profit shows you can navigate tough times, as long as you have the brightest minds in finance at your disposal.
Tariff-induced uncertainty and related market jitters stalled what was expected to be a rebound year for mergers and acquisitions.
That’s right: CPI fell 0.1% in March, according to the US Labor Department, marking the first month-over-month decline since May 2020.
Jamie Dimon warned inflation is likely going up and Larry Fink said the economy might already be in recession.
The S&P 500 notched its biggest single-day decline in market value terms since the onset of the pandemic on Thursday.
Klarna is not alone. Several other high-profile firms that were expected to go public have decided to delay their plans.
According to a recent JPMorgan analysis, individual investors now account for 60% of US equities, an all-time high.
Hype climbed for AI cloud services provider CoreWeave’s IPO after it signed a $11.9 billion deal with OpenAI earlier this month.
The good times, they don’t last. But on Wednesday, we at least found out just how good the good times were.
Wall Street’s panic cycle is retail investors’ opportunity cycle. In other words: the Redditors are at it again.
Known as Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” the VIX has suggested in recent weeks that investors are spooked, for obvious reasons.
Blackstone’s BXMT mortgage trust, on the other hand, is buckling under the weight of a pile of office loans gone bad.
On Tuesday, President Donald Trump slapped import duties on Canada and Mexico, kicking off a full-fledged economic war.
According to Dealogic, just 1,603 deals have been signed this year through Friday, down 19% year-over-year.