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A tense, volatile week on Wall Street ended with all three major U.S. indexes up 5% or more, yet still below where they were when President Trump launched his tariff blitz.
Stocks took a leg higher Friday afternoon on comments from the White House that President Donald Trump is “optimistic” China ...
Consumer prices unexpectedly declined from a month earlier, while a fall in gasoline prices pushed the energy index lower.
Tariffs are testing the habit of staying invested no matter how rocky markets get.
Yoko Kubota is The Wall Street Journal's deputy bureau chief in Beijing, responsible for business news coverage in China including the technology, autos and consumer sectors. She oversees a team ...
President Trump and Treasury Secretary Bessent pick up the left’s false economic dichotomy.
While markets gyrate, a finance guy plays the Masters.
The Trump administration had imposed limits on the Associated Press reporters after the news organization refused to adopt the “Gulf of America” terminology.
Bond traders appear to be betting on a return to normal before long.
The Justices tell lower courts to stay in their proper judicial lane.
Treasury yields moved in different directions as steep tariffs on China were confirmed to take effect overnight. The 10-year yield rose 0.096 percentage point to 4.259%, while the two-year rose 0.002 ...
Chinese policymakers are well-prepared to cope with U.S. tariffs by using policy tools including monetary and fiscal easing, the Communist Party’s flagship newspaper, People’s Daily, said in a ...
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