Wall Street, Stocks
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Stocks looked set to open in the red on Thursday as the relief rally sparked by this week’s U.S.-China tariff deal lost steam. Futures tracking the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 207 points, or 0.5%,
The following seven stocks are all "strong buys" at five or more Wall Street firms, and have zero sell ratings at present. They are also big and established names with broad followings, so there's no risk that you're buying into the hype of just one or two shops:
Most Gulf stocks were unchanged early on Thursday, as oil prices slid and broader Asian stocks fell after enthusiasm from easing trade tensions began to fade and investors waited for further cues.
Investors should find out which stocks Warren Buffett’s company bought and sold when it files its 13-F report of its equity holdings, likely on Thursday.
To identify stocks that can thrive even with tariffs, investors should consider factors such as international revenue exposure, product supply chains and pricing power. Defensive industries such as discount retail,
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Berkshire Hathaway will file Form 13F -- this form provides a concise snapshot of which stocks Warren Buffett bought and sold in the first quarter -- after the closing bell on May 15. Despite being a net seller of stocks for 10 consecutive quarters,
U.S. stocks closed mostly higher after a strong start to the week and amid a flurry of deals for companies like Boeing and NVIDIA.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 gained on Tuesday, with both indexes in positive territory year to date for the first time since February.
While optimism has clearly rebounded, not everyone, including billionaire hedge fund manager Steven Cohen, is convinced that stocks and the U.S. economy are out of the woods. Cohe
British stocks ended higher on Thursday after stronger domestic GDP data, while investors assessed mixed corporate earnings.
Government data showed retail spending was strong in April, but major retailers have warned tariffs would undo that.