Earlier this week, the CAPE ratio crossed 40, a level not seen since the dot-com bubble. Then, Fed Chair Jerome Powell added fuel to the fire, warning: “By many measures... equity prices are fairly highly valued.”
After nine months of standing still, the Fed finally made a move. Powell called the 0.25% trim a “risk-management cut.”
On paper, Oracle’s latest earnings looked forgettable: revenue of $14.9B missed expectations, and adjusted profit came up short. But investors didn’t even blink. Why?
This week, AI disrupted antitrust law, Sydney Sweeney moved markets, and Trump’s tariffs hit a $210B legal wall. It’s a wild one—let’s dive in.
At nearly $4.4 trillion, Nvidia is now 3% of global equity value and 8% of the S&P 500. For context, that’s more than Amazon and Meta combined...
Markets just limped through five straight red days, their worst stretch since January, and the culprit might surprise you.
Warren Buffett may be stepping down as Berkshire Hathaway’s CEO, but his playbook is alive and well. In Q2, Berkshire’s biggest purchase was UnitedHealth Group.
Palantir $PLTR just cleared a major milestone with $1B in quarterly revenue for the first time. Sales grew 48% year-over-year, driven by surging AI demand.
Figma made its public debut yesterday, and it didn’t disappoint. The design software company priced its IPO at $33 per share, above its initial $30–$32 range, and raised about $1.2B in the process. Then came the fireworks...
Opendoor has tripled in just two weeks as Reddit’s r/WallStreetBets crowd piles in, fueling a frenzy that’s now spreading to names like Kohl’s, GoPro, and Krispy Kreme.
While everyone’s watching Nvidia rip through resistance levels, another sector is quietly stealing the show in 2025: industrials.
The S&P 500, Nasdaq, B*tcoin, and Nvidia are all soaring to new heights. But with tariffs escalating and investor greed peaking, is the market ignoring the risks hiding in plain sight?