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U.S. Stocks Trade Lower
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The U.S. birth rate has never been lower. Here’s what that means for stocks.
Americans aren’t having as many kids, but the economy can handle that — for now.MarketWatch - Business -
European Stocks Rise as Prospects of Earlier U.S. Rate Cut Pick Up
European stocks opened higher after Friday’s weaker-than-expected U.S. jobs data increased prospects the Federal Reserve could cut interest rates, potentially by September.The Wall Street Journal - World - Europe -
Move over, meme-stock millennials. Your grandma wants to trade options.
Trading covered-call options on big stashes of stock can earn retirees extra income.MarketWatch - Business -
Standard Chartered posted a rise in first-quarter net profit due to higher trading income, despite lower earnings from the bank's lending business.
Standard Chartered posted a rise in first-quarter net profit due to higher trading income, despite lower earnings from the bank’s lending business.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Weaker-Than-Expected Payrolls Push Down Dollar
The dollar fell in a week when the Fed was perceived as not too hawkish—after Chair Powell kept a rate hike off the table— and payrolls surprised to the downside, for a change.The Wall Street Journal - World -
The U.S. economy and stocks have likely dodged a recession: El-Erian
The U.S. is the sole major engine of global growth in an increasingly less-stable world.MarketWatch - Business -
U.S. stocks rally on ‘Goldilocks’ jobs report as Wall Street’s fear gauge slides
U.S. stocks have swung to an upbeat start in May, with Wall Street’s “fear gauge” easing to its lowest level since the end of March as investor anxieties tied to inflation appeared to subside.MarketWatch - Business -
The lesson of Loki? Trade less
Going back as far as the Norse gods, the market has tricked investors into making rash decisionsFinancial Times - Business -
Tech shares led U.S. stock indexes higher ahead of a jobs report for April, with the S&P 500 and Dow both rising 0.9% and the Nasdaq gaining 1.5%.
Tech shares led U.S. stock indexes higher ahead of a jobs report for April, with the S&P 500 and Dow both rising 0.9% and the Nasdaq gaining 1.5%.The Wall Street Journal - World -
The Job Market Shifted Into Lower Gear
Also, a congressman from Texas was indicted. Here’s the latest at the end of Friday.The New York Times - Top stories
More from The Wall Street Journal
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Sterling Looks Vulnerable if BOE Broaches June Rate Cut
Sterling rose against the dollar following the weaker-than-expected U.S. jobs data, but it risks turning lower if the BOE signals a likely interest-rate cut in June in Thursday’s policy announcement, Swissquote Bank said.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Chipotle Wants Its Stock to Be More Affordable---for Employees
The burrito chain is planning a 50-for-1 stock-split to make its shares more accessible to workers—and hopefully retain more of them, CFO Jack Hartung says.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Qualcomm's Smartphone Future Looks Brighter With AI
AI-enabled smartphones and PCs should help the maker of wireless chips, which remains among the cheapest in semiconductor stocks.The Wall Street Journal - World -
America's Largest Physician-Owned Health Network Files for Bankruptcy
Steward Health Care System, the largest U.S. physician-owned hospital operator, on Monday morning filed for chapter 11 protection, marking one of the biggest hospital bankruptcies in decades.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Cervical Cancer Can Be Eliminated. Alabama Is Leading the Way.
Thousands of U.S. women die each year from this preventable cancer.The Wall Street Journal - World