Rumors suggest Jack Dorsey will become the permanent CEO of Twitter.
Dorsey was the CEO upon Twitter's inception in 2006.
by Jack Delaney
Rumors suggest Jack Dorsey will become the permanent CEO of Twitter.
Dorsey was the CEO upon Twitter's inception in 2006.
Read on to find out if he can improve Twitter's stock price.
by Diane Alter
September layoffs surged as U.S.-based employers announced plans to slash 58,877 jobs.
According to the global outplacement consultancy Challenger, Gray & Christmas, September layoffs were up 43% from August. The total was also up 93% from September 2014, when 30,477 planned layoffs were announced.
Here's which sectors, and companies, were hardest hit...
by Alex McGuire
When it comes to oil stocks, most investors think of big names like Exxon Mobil, BP, or Chevron.
But what most traders don't understand is that oil stocks are categorized based on the company's operations.
Here are the three most commonly traded types of oil stocks...
by David Zeiler
We haven't yet seen the Donald Trump trade plan in written form, as we have with his tax plan, but the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination has said a lot about what he wants to do.
Unlike the tax proposal, which appears workable if not perfect, the Trump trade plan would be an economic disaster for both the United States and the world.
Here's why the Trump trade plan is unworkable and dangerous...
Carly Fiorina has made a name for herself lately. Polls show her tied for third place in the Republican presidential nominee horse race.
As the former CEO of HP, Fiorina is the one 2016 presidential candidate who grasps the ever-growing importance of tech in both our lives and the U.S. economy.
And today, I want to show you what Fiorina's rapid rise means for tech investors like you...
Want to know the biggest news moving the Dow Jones Industrial Average today?
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Most media tuned out once it became clear the U.S. Federal Reserve wouldn't act to raise interest rates in September.
But in doing so, the media failed to report on some illuminating predictions from the Federal Open Market Committee's "dot plot" on where they think the Fed funds rate will be in the near, medium, and long term.
What the media didn't tell you was that an FOMC member actually predicted a negative Fed funds rate – for the first time ever in Fed history.
In light of what we already know about the Fed's plans for a "War on Cash," the FOMC member's comments would seem downright scary – if we weren't so beautifully positioned for even more profits from the Fed's plan.