The threat of nuclear war seems higher than it has in ages, but the stock market wants what wants—and it wants to go higher.
Escalating tensions between Ukraine and Russia sent investors rushing into safe havens such as gold and Treasurys on Tuesday.
Stocks fell and investors fled to safe-haven assets on Tuesday, as global markets reacted to escalating tensions between the ...
Oil prices are on track for weekly gains of more than 5% as escalating tensions between Russia and Ukraine keep energy ...
US stocks recovered after falling earlier in the day. Investors were able to look past a spike in Russia-Ukraine tensions as ...
The Nasdaq Composite gained Tuesday as investors attempted to shake off concerns of rising geopolitical tensions between ...
This Fed-based market signal is flashing a warning for the first time in over a decade. Here’s why it matters.
Stocks are set for a cautious open Thursday following Nvidia's highly-anticipated third quarter earnings report.
"Today is a reflection of concern that, after 1,000 days, the Russia-Ukraine conflict looks like it's getting hotter," said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth Management.
Shares have advanced in Asia, apart from in China, after most U.S. stocks ticked higher to recover some of their sharp slide ...
While investors talk about all the reasons the stock market could blow up—valuations ... less talk of the actual Armageddon plain sight: Russia’s war on Ukraine. Reports emerged that Russian ...