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Wall Street pulls back from its records as JPMorgan Chase and Delta kick off earnings season
Wall Street pulled back from its records following a mixed start to the latest profit reporting season for big U.S. companies.
Optimism about the economy isn’t only reflected in stocks. Bonds have sent similar signals, with the gap widening between the yields on short- and long-term Treasury yields, or what is known on Wall Street as a steepening yield curve.
Intel shares have begun the new year with a bang, but Wall Street is still skeptical about the chip company. Susquehanna raised its target for the price, with a note of caution.
The five largest US investment banks — JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America and Citigroup — are this week expected to report quarterly investment banking revenues of almost $10bn, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, 13 per cent more than a year earlier.
Wall Street’s newest regulator is about to enter his fourth week on the job, and already, he’s staring down a swelling political headache: what to do about prediction markets.
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Is Visa (V) a Buy as Wall Street Analysts Look Optimistic?
According to the average brokerage recommendation (ABR), one should invest in Visa (V). It is debatable whether this highly sought-after metric is effective because Wall Street analysts' recommendations tend to be overly optimistic.
Finance's biggest firms are considering how AI might impact jobs, how it could cut costs, and reduce "grunt work."
Broadcom is uniquely positioned to benefit from secular tailwinds fueling investments across the AI infrastructure value chain. Among the 48 analysts covering Broadcom now, none of them calls the stock a sell.
Shares in the asset management firm – which recorded roughly $13.5 trillion in assets at the end of September – fell roughly 1% Tuesday.