U.S. Stock Market is Overpriced by 16%, Warns Oxford Think-Tank
The stock market’s epic rise has put it in danger of a correction as equity valuations have become significantly overvalued.
The stock market’s epic rise has put it in danger of a correction as equity valuations have become significantly overvalued.
The U.S. stock market and the Fed may not be accurately pricing in economic consequences from the pandemic, according to the IMF.
The Dow Jones rallied for a third straight day as a momentum-driven stock market continued to defy precarious economic data.
Billionaire Bill Ackman just dumped his stake in Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway. Maybe it’s time for us to give up on him too.
Fewer Americans are filing for unemployment claims as businesses reopen, but the damage to the economy will last for a long time.
Institutional investors are shorting the S&P 500 Index at levels not seen since 2016. Is this a sign of things to come or a good contrarian indicator for the bulls?
A new Chinese law, dubbed the ‘nuclear option’ will anger Washington and could spark a fresh round of retaliations between Trump and Beijing. That’s not what investors want to hear.
Three key data points in growth, jobs, and spending, indicate the ongoing stock market rally will be short-lived.
The Dow Jones rallied on Wednesday as investors shrugged off a potentially seismic shift in the U.S. trading relationship with Hong Kong and China.
Pay cuts are a solution to preserving jobs, but they could delay economic recovery and impact the stock market.
Plunging technology stocks weighed on the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Wednesday morning. Negative virus headlines added fuel to the fire.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average zoomed back above 25,000 on Wednesday, and this time, the rally looks like it is for real.
The gold price continues to fall, as slowly rising optimism over the global economy is making equities and bonds more attractive.
Amazon is primed to start spending, but perhaps more for growth than for pandemic protection as Jeff Bezos suggested in Q1 2020.
Carl Icahn is the latest billionaire to be on the wrong side of the stock market. High net-worth investors are not re-entering the market.
With the help of a viral plague, the Federal Reserve is creating zombie companies that cannot feed their own debt and should go extinct.
The housing market is a beacon of hope for the U.S. economy. But there’s one unsettling statistic the bulls don’t want you to see.
The Dow Jones soared on Tuesday as stock market bulls gambled that Trump wouldn’t get tough on China for fear of harming his reelection bid.
Equities have been trekking higher since April, but the rally is probably on its last leg, according to JPMorgan.
The stock market could be in the middle of a dangerous bubble, inflated by enthusiastic investors betting on a speedy economic recovery.