Author: super@dmin
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Market Extra: Stock market lifted as traders bet on downshift in size of Fed rate hikes
After a series of supersize rate hikes in 2022, traders are overwhelmingly betting on a quarter-point rise from the Federal Reserve at its first meeting of 2023.
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Outside the Box: How big tech’s move into healthcare could make you money
Digital health innovation was on display at CES 2023.
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Washington Watch: Biden classified documents: What to know as a special counsel is named
What’s supposed to happen to classified documents when a president leaves office? We answer that question and more.
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: Retail execs are questioning how long they can raise prices, but here’s what most say is 2023’s biggest challenge
A Deloitte report finds that “nearly all” of retail executives surveyed expected less consumption from shoppers this year.
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Metals Stocks: Gold ends at highest since April as U.S. CPI reading ‘marks the beginning of the end for high inflation’
Gold settles Thursday at a more than 8-month high, after a reading on the U.S. consumer-price index signals a further slowdown in inflation at the end of 2022.
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: U.S. budget deficit triples to $85 billion in December
The U.S. budget deficit tripled to $85 billion in December from a year earlier, reflecting somewhat higher spending and a small decline in tax receipts.
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Earnings Outlook: Netflix’s unpredictable finale: With no more subscription guidance, the focus is on financial estimates
Netflix, which reports fiscal fourth-quarter results on Jan. 19, is ditching guidance on net subscriber additions and instead focusing on financial numbers.
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Lawrence G. McMillan: How you can use the stock market’s ‘January Defect’ to your advantage
S&P 500 is in a downtrend, but a test of resistance at 4100 looks possible.
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Commodities Corner: Why natural-gas prices dropped to their lowest in a year
U.S. natural-gas prices have fallen to their lowest level in more than a year just halfway through the winter season.
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The Fed: Fed’s Bullard favors getting interest rates above 5%, but said the pace is not a critical issue
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said Thursday that he still favors getting rates over 5%. Some of his colleagues are backing going more slowly.