Gold prices firmed on Monday, supported by a weak U.S. dollar, as markets awaited Donald Trump's return to the White House and his inauguration speech later in the day for hints on the impact of his upcoming policies on the economy and rate-cut outlook.
Goldman Sachs said the copper market is currently pricing in a 50% chance of a 10% US tariff on the red metal by the end of first quarter.
This president's second term is set to reshape global economic policy, with trade tariffs, tax cuts, and a stronger dollar impacting inflation and interest rates. While the Fed may hold or tighten rates,
The Wall Street CEO discussed growing confidence among business leaders after his bank’s strong fourth-quarter report.
As Donald Trump returns to the White House, Goldman Sachs is looking forward to the "improving regulatory backdrop."
Big banks including JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs start reporting their fourth-quarter earnings today. Here are three things to eye in the results: 1\. Revenues from investment banking and trading Donald Trump’s prospective return to the White House sparked hopes of a boom on Wall Street.
Goldman Sachs' credit-card partnership with Apple may end before its contract runs out in 2030, Goldman CEO David Solomon said on Wednesday.
After posting earnings growth in the fourth quarter, Goldman Sachs is optimistic about 2025 — especially as Donald Trump returns to the White House. Goldman CEO David Solomon and CFO Denis ...
Gold prices firmed on Monday, supported by a weak U.S. dollar, as markets awaited Donald Trump's return to the White House and his inauguration speech later in the day for
Goldman Sachs on Monday said the copper market is pricing in odds of about 50% that there will be a 10% U.S. tariff on the metal by the end of the first quarter of this year.
As Donald Trump steps back into the White House, global markets and investors are on alert. With attention on potential policy shifts, traders eye the yen's strength, crypto markets respond to Trump's digital token,
The tariffs Trump has threatened would ding profits and stocks. But investors think Trump's threats of a punishing trade war are overblown.