“While dollar bulls are numerous and perhaps most vocal in expressing their views, there seems to be a more ‘silent’ plurality of investors looking to sell the dollar instead,” strategists including David Adams wrote in a note. “Many have dry powder and are waiting for a sign to enter shorts.”
Major U.S. banks Morgan Stanley and Bank of America are exploring cryptocurrency service offerings while awaiting regulatory clarity, marking a shift in traditional banking's approach to digital assets.
Citing concerns about going outside its statutory mandate, the Federal Reserve Board of Governors voted to leave the Network of Central Banks and Supervisors for Greening the Financial System.
Traders looking to sell the world’s reserve currency are far more common than thought even as the dollar’s dominance rips across markets, according to Morgan Stanley.
In this article, we are going to take a look at where Morgan Stanley (NYSE ... In November, the Federal Reserve Board found that 99% of the country’s banks reported capital above the regulatory ...
Morgan Stanley is facing scrutiny about how thoroughly it vets prospective clients and their sources of wealth, but so far it's not impacting the investment bank's ability to attract and retain customers, executives said Thursday. Nine months after the ...
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If you are trying to figure out whether now is the time to buy bonds, watch the White House more than the Federal Reserve. The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield has been rising toward 5%, Fed interest-rate cuts be damned.
U.S. bond investors are gearing up for increased volatility and staying defensive in their portfolios amid uncertainty about the impact of the Trump administration's policies and signs that the Federal Reserve's interest rate cuts may be on a lengthy pause.
Wall Street had a rough start to the week on concern that a cheap artificial intelligence-model from Chinese startup DeepSeek could make valuations of the technology that has powered the bull market tough to justify.
US stocks opened lower after Chinese startup DeepSeek's AI model shows AI can be built cheaply. That sparked fears AI spending will stall.
The Nasdaq & S&P 500 fell after Chinese startup DeepSeek shows AI can be built cheaply, sparking fears AI spending will stall. The blue-chip Dow rose.