Nucor Trades at Premium Valuation: Buy, Sell or Hold the Stock?
While NUE gains on its actions to grow through acquisitions and capacity expansion, weak steel prices weigh on its prospects.
While NUE gains on its actions to grow through acquisitions and capacity expansion, weak steel prices weigh on its prospects.
Rising open interest despite cooling prices suggests traders are leaning into volatility, or overexposing themselves to risk.
Investing.com -- Deutsche Bank is advising investors to remain underweight U.S. equities while maintaining a neutral stance on the so-called "Magnificent 7" technology giants, despite a recent pickup in U.S. market performance.
The brokerage company priced its shares at $52, exceeding the high end of their expected range, in one of the most high-profile listings of 2025 so far.
(Bloomberg) -- Equity investors pushed back into the market by a relentless rally are about to find out that the real challenge is just beginning.Most Read from BloombergAs Coastline Erodes, One California City Considers ‘Retreat Now’What’s Behind the Rise in Serious Injuries on New York City’s Streets?A New Central Park Amenity, Tailored to Its East Harlem NeighborsHow Finland Is Harvesting Waste Heat From Data CentersLawsuit Challenges Trump Administration Policy on Migrant ChildrenA sharp reb
Elevated Treasury yields are driven by factors that are bullish for bitcoin.
LONDON (Reuters) -OPEC on Wednesday trimmed its forecast for growth in oil supply from the United States and other producers outside the wider OPEC+ group this year and said it expected lower capital spending following a decline in oil prices. Supply from countries outside the Declaration of Cooperation - the formal name for OPEC+ - will rise by about 800,000 barrels per day in 2025, OPEC said in a monthly report, down from last month's forecast of 900,000 bpd. A slowdown in supply growth outside OPEC+, which groups the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries plus Russia and other allies, would make it easier for OPEC+ to balance the market.
YIWU, China (Reuters) -A tariff truce between the United States and China is helping kickstart the resumption of trade between the countries but for manufacturers of Halloween decorations in the eastern Chinese city of Yiwu feelings are mixed. President Donald Trump's tariffs on Chinese imports, which reached 145% in April, prompted waves of U.S. customers to suspend or delay orders for festive decorations, disrupting business for the likes of Lou Xiaobo, whose company Xubo relies on the U.S. for 20% of sales. The 25-year-old, whose family has been making Halloween decorations in Yiwu for 28 years, warned they would have to scramble to produce and ship their hanging skeletons and costume props to America in time for the October 31 holiday.
Quantitative data points to outside days as a reversal signal