Wall Street is growing louder with warnings that the artificial intelligence trade may be overheating. After months of record gains in AI-linked stocks and corporate spending, concerns are mounting ...
Billions of dollars are flowing into cutting-edge nuclear technologies, from nuclear fusion experiments to small modular reactors and microreactors that backers say will catalyze a global nuclear ...
Billions of dollars are being invested in advanced nuclear technologies, driven by increasing energy demand from AI and broad bipartisan support. Despite significant investment, some Wall Street ...
A billionaire investor known for calling some of Wall Street's ugliest crashes is getting uneasy. Paul Tudor Jones — the hedge fund manager who predicted the 1987 stock market meltdown — said today's ...
The torrent of billion-dollar investment announcements related to artificial intelligence has raised fears that the economy is sitting on a bubble that, if popped, could send it into a tailspin. Some ...
Colin is an Associate Editor focused on tech and financial news. He has more than three years of experience editing, proofreading, and fact-checking content on current financial events and politics.
US President Trump appears once again to have flipped on his latest threat to impose an additional 100 percent tariff on Chinese goods following a decision by Beijing to introduce export licensing on ...
Hong Kong stocks fell on Wednesday, tracking Wall Street’s retreat from record highs amid growing concerns that the artificial intelligence boom may have overheated and risks turning into a bubble.
Forget about the froth in tech valuations. The real excess might be building up in energy stocks. For all the fears about stretched technology shares, many of those companies are hugely profitable ...
The fun parts about blowing a bubble are seeing how big it can get—and how long it takes to pop. The same appears to be true for investors witnessing tech stocks’ increasingly stretched valuations, ...
Concerns that U.S. technology stocks are in a bubble crept higher in Deutsche Bank’s quarterly survey of institutional investors. On a scale from 1 to 10, from “no bubble” to “extreme bubble”, ...