The Dow and S&P 500 closed at all-time highs, extending their recent rallies to four weeks in a row, amid a fresh flurry of first-quarter financial results.
Dogecoin, dogecoin, dogecoin! That must be what bitcoin holders are saying lately. Owners of the world's No. 1 crypto, like Jan from the 1970s-era sitcom, The Brady Bunch, must feel as if they have been living in the shadow of a more intriguing siste...
Major U.S. financial powerhouses Bank of America and JP Morgan are going on a borrowing spree, after reporting blockbuster first-quarter financial results this week, smashing record after record along the way.
The 10-year Treasury note faced some selling pressure on Friday but that didn't stop long-dated U.S. government debt from logging their sharpest yield declines in weeks.
Congress, like many other areas of American life, is slowly but surely beginning to return to normal as more lawmakers and staff get vaccinated and the level of coronavirus worry ebbs. Lawmakers say there's still a long ways to go yet, though.
The Norwegian government said it needs more time to decide whether to restart the use of AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine, or permanently remove it from the country's immunization program.
The measures include for the first time far-reaching financial sanctions, including restrictions on U.S. financial institutions’ ability to trade Russian sovereign debt.
Wealthy investor Mike Novogratz speculates that bitcoin could be worth $100,000 by the end of 2021 and sees that value increasing by five-fold by 2024, as the nascent crypto market continues to evolve and grow.