Before joining Investopedia, David Marino-Nachison was an editor at The Wall Street Journal focused mainly on daily markets and investing news. He also worked on The Journal’s publishing desk; as a ...
The courts are slowly catching up with the many illegal Biden administration rules, and the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ...
It was a mixed day of news for the artificial intelligence sector on Tuesday. The Wall Street Journal reported that Anthropic, a rival to OpenAI backed by Amazon, is in advanced talks to raise $2 ...
BofA Securities analyst John Murphy downgraded shares of electric-vehicle maker Tesla to Hold, but his new target price implies about 17% upside.
In the age of DoorDash and Amazon Prime, it seems almost anything can be delivered. Maik Express underscores that. The ...
The most bullish forecast on Wall Street has just landed, and it’s predicting the S&P 500 will reach 7,100 in 2025, thanks in part to a resilient economy. The author of that call, Oppenheimer ...
Investors can expect more gains for the U.S. stock market in 2025, but should brace for more volatility given already lofty valuations for Wall Street. That’s according to a team of strategists ...
It’s that time of the year when financial-market analysts offer their expert outlook for stocks. Don’t listen to them. The truth is that forecasts are no more accurate than a coin flip.
In a scathing op-ed the Journal, whose parent company Dow Jones is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, said that Trump “on the advice of Elon Musk blew up the end-of-session budget bill ...
Julie Wernau writes about health and medicine across the U.S. for The Wall Street Journal's health and science bureau in New York. She tends toward stories that reveal the on-the-ground impact of ...
Benoit Faucon is a Middle East correspondent for The Wall Street Journal. He focuses on the geopolitics of oil, Iran and Russia's involvement in Africa and the Middle East. He has also strayed ...
Patience Haggin is a reporter covering digital advertising and broadband in The Wall Street Journal's media bureau in New York. She writes frequently on privacy, political advertising and competition.