E-Learning

‘Going All-In’: Jefferies Says These 2 Stocks Could Ride the U.S. Manufacturing Revival

Over the past several years there has been increased public discussion of manufacturing, particularly of ‘reshoring’ in the manufacturing sector. The consensus is that a sector-wide move in that direction is necessary, to reverse the effects of previous decades when much of the US manufacturing plant was moved abroad, to Mexico or East Asia. While reshoring remains more of a policy conversation than a full-scale movement, it has nonetheless influenced recent federal elections. It’s no coincidenc

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Morning Bid: Government shutdown and tariff fears jar year-end markets

U.S. government shutdown fears and fresh trade war threats cast another cloud over Wall Street as a bruising final full trading week of the year comes to a close and dampens what had been a stellar year for U.S. stocks. Already sideswiped by what was seen as a 'hawkish cut' in Federal Reserve interest rates on Wednesday, where the central bank lifted both its 2025 policy rate and inflation projections, the S&P 500 was in the red again late Thursday and futures were down almost 1% before Friday's bell. A spending bill backed by Donald Trump failed in the U.S. House of Representatives late Thursday as dozens of Republicans defied the President-elect, leaving Congress with no clear plan to avert a fast-approaching government shutdown that could disrupt Christmas travel.

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British Airways Owner IAG Bucks Hard Year for Airline Stocks

(Bloomberg) -- It’s been a tough year for investors in European aviation, with Boeing Co.’s production woes, engine problems grounding aircraft and the still-sluggish corporate-travel market weighing on the sector.Most Read from BloombergNew York City’s Historic Preservation Movement Is Having a Midlife CrisisNYPD Car Chases Are Becoming More Frequent — and More DangerousDakar’s Air Quality Plummets as Saharan Dust Descends on SenegalReviving a Little-Known Modernist Landmark in BuffaloCarriers

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Nestle Investor Says Stock Too Cheap After Worst Year on Record

(Bloomberg) -- Nestle SA’s slumping stock valuation has made it irresistible for money manager J. Stern & Co., which has been increasing its holdings in the face of widespread market concern about the pace of a turnaround at the Swiss consumer-goods giant.Most Read from BloombergNew York City’s Historic Preservation Movement Is Having a Midlife CrisisNYPD Car Chases Are Becoming More Frequent — and More DangerousDakar’s Air Quality Plummets as Saharan Dust Descends on SenegalReviving a Little-Kn

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How a hedge fund exodus reshaped global cocoa markets

Behind a record surge in cocoa prices this year, a corner of financial markets that drives the cost of chocolate underwent a seismic shift: the hedge funds that oiled its workings headed for the exit. Confectionery prices, from candy bars to hot chocolate, are heavily influenced by futures contracts for cocoa beans. In the middle of last year, hedge funds - a class of investors that use privately pooled money to make speculative bets - started pulling back from trading cocoa futures because price swings in the market were raising their cost of trading and making it harder to make profits.

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