Plus, the luxury London apartments caught up in Evergrande’s collapse and the future for TikTok in Trump’s America
Trump has delayed implementing tariffs on Canada and Mexico, leaving financial markets to wonder if the new Feb. 1 deadline is for real.
The Wall Street CEO discussed growing confidence among business leaders after his bank's strong fourth-quarter report.
Stocks are approaching records in the first couple of days of Trump's presidency, with more pronounced moves in specific corners of the market this week.
When Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th president of the United States, Goldman Sachs Chief Economist Jan Hatzius said the U.S.economy was in the sweet spot of healthy growth and gradual disinflation. "We estimate that real GDP grew 2.6% in Q4 and expect a similar pace in 2025," he said in a research note.
Goldman Sachs chief economist Jan Hatzius is bullish on the outlook for the U.S. economy, in large part because he doubts Donald Trump’s incoming administration will be able to make good on its promises to drastically reduce budget deficits or immigration into the U.
Several large U.S. financial institutions, including the Federal Reserve, have withdrawn from the networks after years of growing political and legal pressure.
Though Trump is set to reshape the future of AI in America, there's another corporate investment set to take off under his leadership.
Wall Street’s main indexes rose on Tuesday, with the blue-chip Dow at a more than one-month high, as investors assessed President Donald Trump’s executive orders after taking office and awaited his first move on trade policy. In morning trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 423 points, or 1%, to 43,911.
Investors brace for a volatile ride as President-elect Donald Trump’s second term gets underway on Monday, bringing the promise of significant policy shifts.
As Donald Trump returns to the White House, Goldman Sachs is looking forward to the "improving regulatory backdrop."