Saudi considers removing foreign investor restrictions on stocks
The Gulf’s biggest stock market is proposing scrapping rules that limit trading.
The Gulf’s biggest stock market is proposing scrapping rules that limit trading.
Despite the bellicose rhetoric often emanating from the White House and Capitol Hill, don’t be surprised if the two sides reach a pragmatic deal.
The old corporate playbook — drag your feet, lawyer up, wait for the enforcement action that may never come, and sue if you must — has been replaced by something weirder.
The $11 trillion firm has lowered its expectations for stock returns over the next decade to as little as 3.3%, worse than a bucket of corporate bonds.
The stock market is bad at understanding the value of renewable energy, the CEO of one of the largest US power companies told Semafor.
A slowdown in US oil output may allow the group to add supply without crashing prices.
Progressives hailed the ruling as a rare victory.
When conversations turned to energy reliability and affordability, the answer across a broad range of sectors was renewables, not fossil fuels.
The contraction comes as BYD slashed its sales goal for the year.