Wall Street Futures Slip
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Oil surged, stocks fell and investors sought safety in the U.S. dollar and government bonds Friday after Israel struck Iranian nuclear and military targets in an attack that raised the risk of war between the two countries and broader instability in the Middle East.
Australian markets are expected to follow Wall Street this morning. Markets are digesting inflation data and the US-China trade talks. Follow the day's events and insights as they happen with our business reporters on the ABC News live markets blog.
Wall Street trended lower in premarket trading early Thursday as the crash of another Boeing passenger jet dominated headlines and sent the troubled aerospace giant's stock spiraling.
Wall Street futures were down marginally before the bell with earnings season winding down and much-anticipated jobs numbers landing later in the week. The Labor Department is reporting monthly
Asia-Pacific markets were set to open higher, tracking gains on Wall Street gains following a batch of economic data pointing toward a solid U.S. economy.
The Wall Street’s fear gauge surged sharply on Friday, fueled by rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East following Israeli airstrikes on Irani
U.S. stocks are drifting and financial markets worldwide are holding relatively steady as the wait continues for more updates on President Donald Trump’s tariffs and how much they’re affecting the economy.
The so-called TACO trade will be tested as markets wait to see if Trump will actually follow through with his 50% steel duty or if he will put it on hold soon.
The back and forth between famed short-seller Jim Chanos and Bitcoin billionaire Michael Saylor is becoming a Wall Street battle for the ages. The two investors have quarreled against one another in separate Bloomberg interviews this week,