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U.S. consumers modestly lowered their expectations for inflation for the year ahead, while keeping longer-term expectations unchanged.
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Stifel's Barry Bannister believes the stock market is in store for a 12% correction amid stagflation fears.
While tariffs are a tangible worry for investors, something far more nefarious (and important) can weigh on the stock market.
Airline industry sees record passenger growth, signaling strong demand and economic resilience. Read here for more analysis.
Consumer prices in June were 2% higher than the same month last year, up from the 1.9% of May, lifting expectations that policymakers will leave the key interest rate unchanged later this month.
Call it "deja vu," but a bit different. Tariff uncertainty has brought the return of volatility to Wall Street, with Treasury yields higher, inflation expectations rising and stocks looking to shake off Monday's losses.
Last week, the Trump administration announced that it reached a deal with Vietnam that would allow U.S. goods to enter the country duty-free, while Vietnamese exports to the U.S. would face a 20% levy. That was a decline from the 46% tax on Vietnamese imports he proposed in April.
The data gives an early indication of any effect Middle East tensions had on prices in major eurozone economies.
Apollo, for one, expects just one rate cut in 2025. JPMorgan strategists forecast two. Goldman Sachs last week updated its prediction to three, starting in September, arguing that moderating growth and elevated borrowing costs will force the Fed’s hand.
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Cryptopolitan on MSNWall Street is favoring the Unprofitable 858 over the Magnificent 7Wall Street is ditching the profitable tech elites for a wild batch of companies with no earnings and no apologies.