News

Consumer prices unexpectedly declined from a month earlier, while a fall in gasoline prices pushed the energy index lower.
Tariffs are testing the habit of staying invested no matter how rocky markets get.
Yoko Kubota is The Wall Street Journal's deputy bureau chief in Beijing, responsible for business news coverage in China including the technology, autos and consumer sectors. She oversees a team ...
President Trump and Treasury Secretary Bessent pick up the left’s false economic dichotomy.
The tariff selloff tests the long-held practice, with Wall Street warning about the blow to growth.
Stan Druckenmiller, Bill Ackman and Jamie Dimon are among those raising concerns about the president’s steep, ...
Surging home equity is all the more important in a declining stock market. But it’s come with rising property taxes and ...
Lutnick has played a supersize role in Trump’s first months in office, driving tariff discussions, meeting with dozens of business leaders, appearing on television and often standing alongside Trump.
He joined the Journal in 2013 and has written dozens of front-page stories on life and business in Hollywood, specializing in features where commerce meets culture. Erich Schwartzel — Reporter ...
Steve Man, senior industry analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, says he believes new cars will see an approximately $3,500 to $10,000 markup due to tariffs, depending on the make and model. If the 25% ...
Bay Area mobile technology company AppLovin has made a bid to buy TikTok, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg is reportedly looking to the Trump administration for help in fighting against looming ...