Tariffs unveiled against dozens of countries by President Donald Trump Wednesday sent stock markets reeling as the levies are ...
Moves in currency markets reflected the risk-off mood, with investors piling into the Japanese yen, a traditional safe haven. The yen strengthened sharply against other G-10 and Asian currencies in ...
Sinopharm is transforming into a one-stop distribution service provider by offering more value-added services along the distribution chain. For instance, it provides inventory management services for ...
Sanofi said that its Rilzabrutinib treatment was granted orphan drug designation, which is used in the U.S. by the Food and Drug Administration. The designation is a status assigned to a medicine ...
Acting President and Prime Minister Han Duck-soo at an economic policy meeting in Seoul on Thursday directed Trade Minister Ahn Duk-guen to prepare "emergency support measures" for the country's auto ...
"Liberation Day" wasn't the clearing event investors hopped for. That isn't good news for stocks-in the short run. President Donald Trump's new tariff plan is a "tsunami" that will slam into the ...
Politico reports that Tesla TSLA CEO Elon Musk will be stepping back from his current role as a close advisor to US President ...
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia--Malaysia is actively engaging with U.S. authorities on "fair trade relations", the Southeast Asian country's trade ministry said after President Trump unveiled sweeping new ...
After a tough end to 2024, bond investors weathered a varied market landscape in 2025’s first quarter. Interest rates across ...
The leading bid for Citgo favors creditors whose collateral rights over the refiner are in dispute. Oil futures rose as the market shrugged off a 6.2 million barrel build in U.S. crude inventories ...
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives characterized this slate of tariffs as 'worse than the worst case scenario' the Street was fearing. U.S. stock-index futures declined in after-hours trading, reflecting fears ...
Back-of-the-envelope calculations from economists suggest that the average U.S. tariff rate will be around 22%, last seen in 1910 and higher than the infamous Smoot-Hawley Act of 1930.