US Stocks Stumble, Erasing Some of the Prior Day’s Gains
Technology and health care companies drove a broad slide in U.S. stocks Wednesday, erasing some of the market’s solid gains from a day earlier.
Technology and health care companies drove a broad slide in U.S. stocks Wednesday, erasing some of the market’s solid gains from a day earlier.
Many newspaper publishers _ after suffering for a decade from job losses, shrinking ad dollars and circulation declines _ are so far shunning Apple’s new “Netflix for news” subscription.
Under fire from lawmakers on Capitol Hill over the two deadly Boeing crashes, the head of the Federal Aviation Administration is defending the FAA’s practice of relying on aircraft makers to help certify their own planes for flight.
Lyft raises IPO target as investor anticipation builds for ride-hailing service’s stock market debut.
The number of homes under construction fell 8.7 per cent in February, as ground breakings for single-family houses plunged to their lowest level in nearly two years.
Ride-hailing service Uber announced on Tuesday it has acquired Mideast competitor Careem for $3.1 billion, giving the San Francisco-based firm the commanding edge in a region with a large, young, tech-savvy population.
Cronos Group Inc. reported a net loss of $11.6 million in its fourth quarter compared with a profit in the same quarter a year ago, as revenue more than tripled with the legalization of recreational marijuana in Canada.
Federal trade agency further muddies messy Apple-Qualcomm battle over iPhone technology.
U.S. stocks capped a day of choppy trading with an uneven finish Monday as investors wrestled to make sense of newly pessimistic outlooks for the global economy.
Business economists foresee a sharp slowdown in U.S. economic growth over the next two years, in sharp contrast to the Trump administration’s predictions that growth will accelerate this year and next.