The Australian Dollar, New Zealand Dollar, and Canadian Dollar all struggled to hold on to Wednesday?s gains amidst choppy trading, as commodities like...
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The Australian Dollar, New Zealand Dollar, and Canadian Dollar all struggled to hold on to Wednesday?s gains amidst choppy trading, as commodities like...
The Australian Dollar, New Zealand Dollar, and Canadian Dollar all struggled to hold on to Wednesday?s gains amidst choppy trading, as commodities like...
The GBP crosses have dropped sharply but a period of consolidation is likely. Look for range opportunities, especially in GBPNZD, which is testing channel...
Let’s take a look at the possible trading opportunities that presented themselves in the SPY (S&P 500 ETF) intraday chart today with the interesting price action. SPY 5-minute chart: You would have thought the bears would have mauled the stock market indexes when you woke up to read the headline “Inflation jumps the most in 14 years and is twice what was expected!” and yes...
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- McClatchy Co., the second-largest U.S. newspaper publisher, is freezing pay across the company for a year starting Sept. 1 in the latest effort to hold down costs....
The Labor Department reported inflation is now rising at its fastest pace since 1991 - an annual rate of 5.6 percent - as food and energy prices continue to surge.
As the dollar has been rallying hard against the euro, exchange traded funds (ETFs) that are bullish on the dollar have benefited. The dollar has done this as a U.S. slowdown has spread to other foreign economies. Jack Crooks for MoneyandMarkets explains some of the many foreign economic problems that the dollar is rallying against. Germany, for example, has seen industrial orders drop sharply ...
Technology stocks put in a mixed trading performance Thursday as the sector felt some of the broad market impact of the latest figures that showed a rise in retail inflation in the U.S.
Jesse Eisinger's column this month is about the different regulatory structures in London and New York, and how they both failed. I asked him about it: Jesse, you travelled to London for your latest column, and came away with the conclusion that neither the UK's principles-based regulatory approach nor the US's rules-based system have worked very well in practice. That said, you do seem to thin...
