Wall Street job cuts loom as market turmoil stalls deals
U.S. investment banks are poised to cut more jobs if economic uncertainty continues to weigh on dealmaking in the months ahead, according to analysts and recruiters.
U.S. investment banks are poised to cut more jobs if economic uncertainty continues to weigh on dealmaking in the months ahead, according to analysts and recruiters.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq led a selloff among Wall Street’s main indexes, falling over 3% to a near six-month low, on fears that a tariff war could spark an economic slowdown.
Hedge fund stock-pickers lost billions of dollars on Monday in a rout in global technology shares sparked by the emergence of a low-cost Chinese AI model.
Corporate giants Goldman Sachs and Apple will pay $89 million for violations of consumer protection laws in their joint credit card business.
The U.S. Federal Reserve will cut the federal funds rate by 25 basis points in both November and December.
China is chasing Tesla in the race to build battery-powered humanoids expected to replace human workers building EVs on assembly lines.
Wall Street somewhat rebounded from a disaster on Tuesday, as main stock indexes grew over 1%. Investors searched for bargains after a global stock selloff and panic of a possible recession occurred on Monday.
Wall Street’s main indexes plummeted on Monday, as fears are continuing to grow that the United States is going into a recession following last week’s economic numbers ripping through global markets.
At issue is how the central bank calculates an extra layer of capital it imposes on U.S. global systemically important banks, known as the “GSIB surcharge.”
Big U.S. lenders are expected to show they have ample capital to weather any renewed turmoil during this week’s Federal Reserve health checks.