Investors concerned about sticky inflation should look to high-yield dividend stocks in sectors that will continue to outperform. Here are five such stocks.
US stocks surged higher Wednesday after an encouraging inflation report and blockbuster profits for some of America’s biggest banks.
World stocks are mixed follow Wall Street’s mostly positive performance ahead of key U.S. inflation data that could influence the pace of the Federal Reserve’s rate cuts.
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks are drifting around a record on Friday as they head for the close of a second straight winning week.
Asia-Pacific markets trade mostly higher on Friday following an upbeat session on Wall Street overnight after U.S. President Donald Trump said he would push for lower interest rates and cheaper oil prices,
Wall Street’s main indexes closed higher on Tuesday, with the S&P 500 and the Dow hitting their highest in more than a month, as investors assessed Donald Trump’s first actions as president and breathed relief that he did not start his second term with blanket tariff increases.
The S&P 500 was 1.5% higher in early trading. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 652 points, or 1.5%, as of 9:35 a.m. Eastern time, and the Nasdaq composite was 1.7% higher.
Project Stargate will see companies like Oracle, SoftBank, MGX, and OpenAI commit an initial $100 billion to build data centers in the U.S.
Australian shares are poised for a cautious start as investors worry about China’s AI progress, the Federal Reserve meeting and key local inflation data.
Higher prices aren't necessarily inflation. We have higher prices since the coronavirus not because of monetary error, but due to tragic lockdowns.
According to their analysis, U.S. large value stocks and U.S. small stocks - think the Vanguard Value ETF VTV and Vanguard Small-Cap ETF VB - are likely to give total returns over a decade of between 15% and 50% in real, inflation-adjusted returns, just slightly ahead of REITs. Not great, but OK.