U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs (GS) is forecasting $1 trillion U.S. of stock buybacks in 2025, the most in the past five years. Goldman Sachs analyst Scott Rubner says equity markets could get a boost in coming months following a corporate share
After entering a technical recession in 2022, the U.S. economy has proven resilient even amid high interest rates.
Read guidance, analysis, and updates on the myriad issues arising from the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Updated hourly every day, the insights published here are written by leading ...
Barclays has tightened its working-from-home requirements, making it the latest company to rethink its hybrid working policy since the end of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Five years after the Covid-19 pandemic sent workers scrambling for home ... with few exceptions such as Goldman Sachs and Tesla, which quickly mandated full-time office attendance. Now, several major companies are abandoning the compromise approach.
By Saeed Azhar NEW YORK (Reuters) -Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon was awarded an $80 million stock bonus to stay at the helm for another five years, a stark turnaround for a leader whose survival ...
A risk-taking culture, geographic advantages, and strong consumer spending continue to drive US economic growth way ahead of its peers.
Goldman Sachs expects a gradual recovery in end-market growth throughout the year as the Tools and the contract research organizations (CROs) enter 2025 after underperforming in 2024. Bioprocessing is anticipated to gain momentum as the year progresses,
We recently published a list of 12 Safe Stocks to Buy for the Long Term in 2025. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) stands against other safe stocks to buy for the long term in 2025.
Global shares rose as investors digested earnings from Microsoft and Meta in the wake of this week's rout in technology stocks, while the dollar was steady against most other currencies after the Federal Reserve left rates unchanged.
The US central bank held interest rates steady on Wednesday and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said there would be no rush to cut them again until inflation and jobs data made it appropriate.