(Bloomberg) -- Roughly $1.7 trillion was erased from the S&P 500 Index at the start of trading on Thursday amid worries that President Donald Trump’s sweeping new round of tariffs could plunge the economy into a recession.Most Read from BloombergMetro-North Is Faster Than Acela on NYC-New Haven Route After Signal UpdatesLondon Clears Final Hurdle for More High-Speed Trains to EuropeLocal Governments Vie for Fired Federal WorkersChicago School District Agrees to Minimum 16% Teacher Pay RaiseThe d...
Continue ReadingAs the fate of the social media app hangs in the balance, aspiring buyers are lining up...
Continue ReadingGoodRx is trying to help pharmacies compete in a digital age, where they already face pressure on their margins...
Continue ReadingWith a deadline for the TikTok ban days away, President Donald Trump was reportedly briefed on a framework to bring in new U.S. investors to keep the popular short-video app running. Tech giant Amazon also has reportedly made a late push for the social media app. The White House was close to approving a plan that would allow a group of investors to buy a stake in TikTok's U.S. operations, the Financial Times reported Wednesday, citing unnamed sources...
Continue ReadingThe global e-commerce market is projected to experience significant growth, forecasted to reach USD 73.52 trillion by 2030 from USD 25.4 trillion in 2024, marking a compound annual growth rate of 19.2%. This expansion is driven by increased internet accessibility, shifting consumer behaviors towards online platforms, and the adoption of omnichannel retailing which integrates online and offline shopping experiences. Despite the anticipated growth, challenges such as logistics and supply chain.....
Continue ReadingThe KA-01 mission marks the start of full-scale satellite deployment for Amazon's Project Kuiper...
Continue ReadingNews of the day for April 3, 2025...
Continue ReadingThe latest investor updates on stocks that are trending on Thursday...
Continue ReadingApple (NASDAQ: AAPL) is the world's largest company -- by about half a trillion dollars as I write this. In fact, considering the current state of Apple's business and the growth trajectories of some of its competitors, I think it's highly likely that Apple will lose its title of the world's largest company within the next few years. There are four companies that could pass Apple in that time frame...
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