Asian markets mostly fell Monday following a dour end to last week for Wall Street, where a disappointing round of data added to concerns about the world's number one economy.
U.S. stocks tumbled Monday and wiped out even more of their gains since President Donald Trump ’s election in November, after he said that tariffs announced earlier on Canada and Mexico would take effect within hours.
U.S. stock indexes drifted to a mixed finish on Wednesday after climbing in the morning but then running out of steam. The S&P 500 finished an iota higher, less than 0.1%, after surrendering virtually all of its early gain of 0.
Asian shares have wavered after beginning the week with solid gains, despite strong Chinese factory data. In Hong Kong, Chinese bubble tea chain Mixue Bingcheng’s shares soared 43% after its
Asian shares have wavered after beginning the week with solid gains, despite strong Chinese factory data. In Hong Kong, Chinese bubble tea chain Mixue Bingcheng’s shares soared 43% after its $444 million IPO.
U.S. stocks rallied on Friday to close out their dreary February on a brighter note. The S&P 500 jumped 1.6% to trim its loss for the month, enough to make it the worst only
Wall Street is having a small rebound before the opening bell Friday but remains on track for another dismal week of losses as investors try to anticipate what President Donald Trump’s
When Bonnie Chan Yiting was in Davos six weeks ago for the World Economic Forum's (WEF) annual confab, the Swiss ski resort was abuzz with a groundbreaking app that a little-known artificial intelligence (AI) start-up had released half a world away in China.
Asian shares were mostly lower on Friday, with Tokyo’s benchmark down more than 2% after a sell-off on Wall Street. U.S. futures and oil prices were higher. Bitcoin was trading near $88,266, down 3.4% according to CoinDesk,
Asia-Pacific markets were set to trade mixed Wednesday, tracking declines in two key Wall Street benchmarks overnight after the U.S. consumer confidence survey came in much weaker than economists' estimates.
HONG KONG, Feb 24 — Asian markets mostly fell today following a dour end to last week for Wall Street, where a disappointing round of data added to concerns about the world’s number one economy. The euro started on the front foot after conservatives ...
South Korea’s consumer inflation for February rose 2% year on year, more than Reuters estimates of a 1.95% increase.