Wall Street opens lower
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Investors are increasingly souring on the United States, as illustrated by the declining dollar, the stalled stock market and rising government borrowing costs.
The Big Tech rivals are spending more than ever, but analysts are more concerned about Microsoft at the moment.
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A new kid-focused savings option is starting to appear in bank benefits, with President Trump’s latest account idea in the mix.
Meta gains on earnings beat. Microsoft outlines Q3 revenue target amid accelerating AI cloud demand and Copilot seat growth. Tesla beats Q4 expectations, gives upbeat outlook.
Looking beyond Wall Street's top-and-bottom-line estimate forecasts for Snap (SNAP), delve into some of its key metrics to gain a deeper insight into the company's potential performance for the quarter ended December 2025.
A day of dramatic swings on Wall Street, including Microsoft's worst drop in nearly six years, finished with only relatively modest moves.
Wall Street's main averages were significantly lower on Friday as investors continued to assess the latest company earnings and technology stocks carried on declining. The be
Microsoft saw its stock fall by 10% by the end of trading, doubling yesterday’s losses and jettisoning $357 billion in market value in the process. It was a larger move than the market caps of about 96% of S&P 500 Index members, and bigger than the values of stock markets in countries such as Finland, Vietnam and Poland.
Wall Street ticked to a record as stocks zigzagged underneath the market's surface following mixed profit reports from UnitedHealth, General Motors and other big companies
Software stocks are skidding today. The rout underscores how fast Wall Street’s enthusiasm for the sector has evaporated in the months since the emergence of “vibe coding”—the practice of using
Wall Street’s booming year will not be enough to stave off a financial crisis that Mayor Zohran Mamdani says is worse than the Great Recession nearly two decades ago.