China, trade talks and stock futures
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Wall Street futures dipped slightly despite the US and China reaching a trade agreement consensus after high-level talks in London. Dow futures fell 1
Futures on Wall Street are sulking this morning despite both US and China reaching a broad consensus to implement the Geneva trade agreement that both countries had arrived on last month. The Dow futures are down 110 points,
Early trading on Wall Street is thin with all eyes on China-U.S. trade talks in London that could have a huge impact on the global economy. Futures for the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq each inched up 0.1% before the bell Tuesday, while futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average were essentially flat.
(Reuters) -Wall Street futures slipped on Friday, heading into the last trading session of a solid month for equities, as investors assessed an appeals court decision to undo a prior ruling that had blocked most of U.
U.S. stocks are drifting and financial markets worldwide are holding relatively steady as the wait continues for more updates on President Donald Trump’s tariffs and how much they’re affecting the economy.
Wall Street futures were down marginally before the bell with earnings season winding down and much-anticipated jobs numbers landing later in the week. The Labor Department is reporting monthly
Wall Street and financial markets around the world jumped after a U.S. court ruled that President Donald Trump is not authorized to impose sweeping tariffs on imports under an emergency-powers law.
While Wall Street is sending money abroad, Main Street is leaning in to America, doubling down on a “buy-the-dip” strategy that has, for now, paid off.
The so-called TACO trade will be tested as markets wait to see if Trump will actually follow through with his 50% steel duty or if he will put it on hold soon.
Now, Brian Quintenz — a former Wall Street regulator who has been tapped to lead the small but powerful Commodity Futures Trading Commission — is preparing to take over an agency in disarray.