NEW YORK, April 25 (Reuters) - Wall Street advanced on Friday, notching weekly gains as investors parsed a spate of earnings and looked for signs of easing tensions in the U.S.-China trade dispute.
The Wall Street Journal editorial board thinks China is winning the trade war against the U.S. and President Trump, according to its latest essay. “The good news is that at least Mr. Trump is finally ...
US stocks closed out a wild month with a whimper as tariff jitters returned to Wall Street. Stocks bounced around in a choppy trading session on Friday after President Donald Trump said China has ...
Substandard repairs and a slow bureaucracy have caused U.S. Navy ships to sit in repair yards for years without being used, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday. Repairs of Navy ships continue to ...
Wall Street Sees Higher China Growth, Less Stimulus on US Truce A worker loads bundles of goods onto a truck at an industrial park in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, China. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg ...
China’s fleet of warships is eclipsing the U.S. As tensions between the two global powers grow, the U.S. is looking to South Korea, one of its biggest allies in Asia, to help increase its battleship ...
Investors remained cautious Friday as they wait to see if the Trump administration's efforts to cool trade tensions with key U.S. economic partners will bear fruit. Both the S&P 500 and tech-heavy ...
One of the innumerable legends surrounding the construction of the Great Wall of China tells of a workman who estimated that he would need 99,999 bricks to construct a section of the wall now known as ...
The Great Wall of China traces its origins back to the fifth century B.C. during the Warring States Period. Each of the fragmented kingdoms constructed their own walls for defense against invasions, ...
China is limiting the flow of critical minerals to Western defense manufacturers, delaying production and forcing companies to scour the world for stockpiles of the minerals needed to make everything ...