Wall Street, Trump and TACO trade
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Wall Street has a new shorthand about President Donald Trump — and he’s not happy about it. Traders have reportedly come up with the acronym TACO, which stands for “Trump always chickens out,” to describe the tumultuous trade environment created by the president’s habit of threatening to impose tariffs on countries,
U.S. stocks drifted lower, as Wall Street's momentum cooled a day after charging back within a few good days’ worth of gains from its all-time high.
U.S. stocks are holding steadier a day after leaping back within a few good days’ worth of gains from their all-time high
Tragedy plus time is the formula for comedy, but on Wall Street it equals opportunity. Wait a while and even the costliest failures will be resurrected. Look no further than the phenomenon of cash-stuffed shells designed to find takeover targets,
U.S. stocks are holding steadier a day after leaping back within a few good days’ worth of gains from its all-time high.
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As Stellantis names insider Antonio Filosa to take over as chief executive, it turns out Wall Street is expecting more from the Jeep maker’s stock price than any of its major rivals.
Exchange-traded funds have amassed trillions of dollars by offering investors greater tax efficiency, liquidity and lower costs than mutual funds. Now, a looming regulatory shift is poised to bring the two vehicles closer together — and threatens to complicate the very features that fueled the ETF boom.
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.