Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and Wall Street Journal
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Wall Street veterans have spent months warning that investors may be underestimating the risks. "Unfortunately, I think there is complacency in the markets," JPMorgan Chase's CEO, Jamie Dimon, said earlier in July,
This past April, when President Donald Trump started flirting with the notion of firing Fed Chair Jerome Powell, stocks and the dollar tumbled because investors worried that even talking about such a move crossed a red line.
President Donald Trump sent the U.S. stock market on a jagged round trip after saying he had “talked about the concept of firing” the head of the Federal Reserve.
Wall Street experienced a record-breaking revenue surge in the year’s second quarter, investment bank Goldman Sachs announced Wednesday morning, following the market uncertainty caused by President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs in April.
What does Donald Trump have to prove to win his WSJ lawsuit over ‘fake’ Epstein card? - Here’s what President Donald Trump would have to prove to win his $10 billion defamation lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal.
Wall Street appears calm after President Donald Trump walked back his earlier threats to fire Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
You see, many folks on X were able to quickly find “receipts” that contradicted Trump Jr.’s dubious claims in his attempt to dismiss the Journal’s reporting. Donald Trump Jr. attempted to step up for his dad Friday morning, but ended up stepping in something else instead― metaphorically, that is.
President Donald Trump’s signature tax and spending legislation is providing short-term clarity for Wall Street but fueling concerns about the long-term health of the US economy, investors say.