World shares and U.S. futures are mostly higher despite a rocky session on Wall Street after Canada and Mexico were hit by 25% U.S. tariffs that took effect on Tuesday.
Asia-Pacific markets mostly in red on Tuesday, following a downbeat session on Wall Street after President Donald Trump announced that tariffs on Canada and Mexico "will go forward" once the one-month delay period expires next week.
South Korea’s consumer inflation for February rose 2% year on year, more than Reuters estimates of a 1.95% increase.
U.S. stocks are holding a bit steadier, for now at least, following the sharp tumble that wiped out the last of the “Trump bump” they received following President Donald Trump’s
Shares retreated Friday in Asia, with benchmarks in Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea falling more than 2% after Wall Street indexes fell sharply on doubts over the frenzy around artificial-intelligence technology.
Shares have retreated in Asia, with benchmarks in Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea falling more than 2% after Wall Street indexes fell sharply on doubts over the frenzy around artificial-intelligence
U.S. stocks are rallying after President Donald Trump pulled back on some of his tariffs, raising hopes he may avoid a worst-case trade war that grinds down economies and sends
Wall Street lost momentum before the opening bell Tuesday and markets in Europe and Asia slid. The declines added to a big selloff Monday. Futures for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq each fell 0.6% in premarket trading. Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.3%.
Wall Street appears headed for a small rebound, but remains on track for another dismal week of losses as investors try to anticipate what President Donald Trump’s tariffs mean for markets and the bro