Trump on Supreme Court's Tariff Decision
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Investors must remember that monster growth usually doesn't last very long.
Northwestern Mutual’s Matt Stucky joins TheStreet to break down small caps, market rotation, AI disruption risks and his 2026 market outlook.
The market has seen a sharp turnaround from prior years, when the promise of AI helped drive U.S. stock indexes to record after record. Now, companies in industries as varied as software and legal services and trucking have seen investors suddenly turn against them when worries flare that AI-powered competitors could steal their customers.
Once a Wall Street favorite, Target is struggling with shrinking sales, analyst downgrades, and brand erosion despite a $5B recovery plan.
Wall Street is rapidly selling stocks of companies vulnerable to AI disruption, wiping billions from financial firms such as Charles Schwab, Raymond James and LPL Financial.
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'Inflation will surprise to the downside in 2026': Why Wall Street expects juiced economy, stock gains this year
Investors may be "having a cake and eating it" in 2026, with Wall Street strategists predicting stock market gains driven by Fed rate cuts, tax incentives, and lower-than-expected inflation. As Wall Street prepares for this week's highly anticipated ...
U.S. stocks steadied after an encouraging update on inflation helped calm a Wall Street that’s been wracked by worries about how AI may upend the business world.
However, the initial reaction from many on the Street wasn't overly negative, with many pointing to the U.S. government stoppages as the main culprit for the lackluster expansion. "At first glance the first reading of Q4 GDP was very disappointing,
Wall Street kept calm Friday after the Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs, which had triggered panic in financial markets when announced last year, and stocks ticked higher.