(Bloomberg) -- Bond-market veteran Bob Michele says there’s one scenario investors aren’t fully prepared for in 2025: the calmest Treasury market in nearly a decade.Most Read from BloombergNYPD Car Chases Are Becoming More Frequent — and More DangerousNew York City’s Historic Preservation Movement Is Having a Midlife CrisisDakar’s Air Quality Plummets as Saharan Dust Descends on SenegalJPMorgan Asset Management’s chief investment officer for global fixed income, currencies and commodities sees a
Dow Aims to End Longest Losing Streak Since 1974
Post-election profit taking and the Fed’s “dot plot” weighed on the stock market benchmark.
Darden Restaurants Stock Gains After Q2 Earnings Beat Estimates, Sales Jump 6%
Darden Restaurants, Inc. (NYSE:DRI) shares are trading higher in the premarket session on Thursday. The company reported that the second quarter adjusted earnings per share was $2.03, beating the street view of $2.02. Quarterly sales of $2.89 billion missed the analyst consensus estimate of $2.899 billion. Total sales increased 6%, driven by a blended same-restaurant sales increase of 2.4% and sales from the addition of 103 Chuy’s restaurants and 39 net new restaurants. Olive Garden same-restaur
Why Robinhood is a better stock than Coinbase despite a 180% surge this year: Analyst
In the Coinbase vs. Robinhood debate, Dan Dolev said it's Robinhood all the way. Here's why.
Analysts revamp Microsoft stock price targets on AI chip-demand shift
Here’s what could be next for Microsoft stock.
US applications for unemployment benefits come back down after last week's big rise
The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits fell markedly last week following a big increase the week before. Jobless claim applications declined by 22,000 to 220,000 for the week of Dec. 14, the Labor Department reported Thursday. Continuing claims, the total number of Americans collecting jobless benefits, fell by 5,000 to 1.87 million for the week of Dec. 7.
Founder of DeFi Giant Curve Gets Liquidated Again as CRV Slumps
Curve founder Michael Egorov played down the $882,000 liquidation on X.