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JPMorgan's Marko Kolanovic moves markets with his research. These are his "favorite" trades to profit from earnings-season volatility.
Howard Marks says investors should look for durability and dependability to help navigate through an unprecedented negative interest rate environment.
Investors face a bevy of imminent risks and should remain on high alert, according to RBC Capital Markets.
Peter Schiff explains why the US economy is headed for higher rates, stagflation, and a deep recession.
The traditional 60-40 portfolio that is used as a benchmark for diversification "will not survive the 2020s," the bank's strategists said.
John Hussman, president of Hussman Investment trust, thinks a 65% market crash will bring the S&P 500 back to "run-of-the-mill valuation levels."
Peter Schiff, president and CEO of Euro Pacific Capital, thinks time is wearing thin for the US economy.
The CEO and chief investment officer of DoubleLine Capital thinks investors can make a bundle from a controversial trade.
These value stocks are already on the rise but still trading at a steep discount to Goldman Sachs' price forecasts.
After revamping the way it interprets market sentiment, Goldman Sachs says stocks will slip, and are vulnerable if the economy doesn't improve.
These trading recommendations should capture the market's upside while hedging against losses if there's a crash.
The Twitter CEO's fintech company, which owns Cash App, is squaring up to the no-fee online trading platform.
Marko Kolanovic explains how to maximize profits as investors suddenly ditch the most-loved stocks for some of the worst performers.
The company now expects its adjusted earnings per share to drop by 3.5% to 6.5%, after previously estimating yearly growth between 3.5% and 7%.
The fully-legal trading method uses the difference in the official exchange rate and brokers' exchange rate to net thousands of pesos in profit.
A $60 billion investing firm says profit advantages that have helped build US corporations into giants are fading, limiting the stocks' potential.
"All those valet companies they wanted to back have blown up and the bubble has been proven wrong."
Robo-advisers can work well for consumers who have basic financial knowledge and don't need comprehensive financial planning advice.
Their behavior was eerily similar to the eve of the 2008 financial crisis — and it is proverbially keeping this chief equity strategist up at night.
Paul Murphy is a partner at VC fund Northzone in London. He worked at Microsoft during its $8.5 billion acquisition of Skype.