(Bloomberg) -- A former hedge fund manager whose firm made billions during the global financial crisis is ready to pounce on volatility again, as he sees threats to market stability at a level not seen since 2008.Most Read from BloombergIs This Weird Dome the Future of Watching Sports?NYC Congestion Pricing to Take Effect After Years of DelaysNYC Congestion Pricing Takes Effect After Years of DelaysNYPD Seeking Gunmen After 10 People Wounded Outside Queens VenueNYC Congestion Pricing Cleared by
Bitcoin could top $125,000 or fall toward $77,000 this quarter — depending on what Trump does next
Here are three major factors that could drive bitcoin’s price in the first quarter.
Why a recent Supreme Court decision could undermine the stock market's biggest bull case for Trump's 2nd term
The reversal of the Chevron doctrine "may make deregulation under the new Trump administration less robust than markets expect," Barry Gilbert said.
Stock market manages strong start to 2025. But watch for these potential pitfalls.
Stock-market investors are just two days into the new year but managed to halt the slide that damped the end of a still stellar 2024.
The dollar will stay strong if the world keeps ‘shoveling all of its savings’ into US stocks, strategist says
"If my neutral rate is higher than your neutral rate, my currency ought to be going up forever."
Warren Buffett dumped stocks, built a $300 billion cash pile, and updated his death plan in 2024. Here are his 6 highlights.
Warren Buffett paid tribute to the late Charlie Munger, gifted more than $6 billion to good causes, and sold $133 billion of stocks in nine months.
Who really gets the H-1B visas Elon Musk is fighting about?
Critics of the H-1B program worry that these workers are displacing Americans by providing cheaper labor, especially in the tech industry. Supporters say there are simply not enough US workers to fill the demand needed in these growing industries.