Wall Street, Trump and stocks
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US Stock market today opened with a cautious rise as Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq futures edged up while investors closely track Trump’s new tax bill and rising debt worries. The proposed legislation, which could add trillions to the $36 trillion deficit,
20hon MSN
Bond yields inched higher and Wall Street flipped from small gains to losses before the opening bell Thursday after rising U.S. debt sank markets on the previous day. Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.5% in premarket trading, while futures for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq each slid 0.3%.
Wall Street retreats as Target reports falling sales and issues tepid forecast due to tariff worries
Wall Street futures headed lower after a major U.S. retailer blamed its grim forecast on tariff concerns and oil prices rose.
Stock markets were mostly down and the dollar continued to fall as concerns persisted over U.S. government debt.
U.S. equity-index futures have turned lower an hour-and-a-half ahead of the opening bell on Wall Street. The S&P 500 is now in line for a 0.2% fall, having shown minor gains for much of the session. T
U.S. markets edged lower in trading before the opening bell as the last few major companies report earnings amid a dearth of market-moving news
Stock markets have largely shrugged off Moody’s Ratings stripping the U.S. of its last triple-A credit rating.
Wall Street share futures slipped with the dollar on Monday and Treasury yields rose as concerns about erratic U.S. economic policies were underlined by Moody's downgrade of the country's credit rating.
Fears have grown that a new U.S. budget bill would put even more stress on the country’s already large deficit.