Trump To Skip US Supreme Court Hearings On Tariffs
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7hon MSN
Abu Dhabi hosts oil summit as OPEC+ halts production hikes planned for first quarter of 2026
Abu Dhabi opened a major oil summit Monday with officials offering bullish optimism that power demands for artificial intelligence and global aviation will boost energy prices, just hours after OPEC+ paused production increases planned for next year.
The fingerprints of artificial intelligence are all over mass layoffs and downsizing at Meta, Amazon, Salesforce, YouTube and other major companies, raising fears of an AI-fueled jobs wipeout for white-collar workers.
Trump's Department of Education is kicking off the second week of negotiations on its student-loan repayment changes and new borrowing caps.
19hon MSN
Will the Stock Market Soar or Crash Under President Donald Trump in 2026? Here's What History Shows.
While Trump is arguably one of the most unpredictable presidents of all time, investors, analysts, and market strategists often try to use the past to look for clues regarding what could happen in the future. Will the stock market soar or crash under President Trump in 2026? History won't tell us for sure, but here's what it shows might happen.
The unaffordable housing market is causing a growing number of home buyers to take on a type of riskier loan to cut their borrowing costs. They are opting for adjustable-rate mortgages, or ARMs. These loans initially offer cheaper borrowing rates compared with a fixed-rate mortgage.
4hon MSN
India now incurs higher U.S. tariffs than China. What does it say about Trump's foreign policy?
Indian exports to the US now incur a total tariff of 50%, higher than 47% tariffs on Chinese goods. Experts say "leader-level chemistry" between India and U.S. is missing and there is growing disconnect between the two countries.
But even with US tariffs on imported cars and parts, it has shaped up to be a pretty good time for car companies. Most automakers, even US-based ones, import some cars and most parts. But car companies’ dire cost estimates have decreased as tariffs keep getting rolled back,
Buying a home is the biggest purchase most people will ever make. So it makes sense that's the first topic of Business Insider's "Well Spent" vodcast.
The move caps a dramatic month in oil markets, riven by concerns of a supply glut and uncertainty over sanctions on Russian producers.
In an interview with CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday, Bessent said he believed the economy was in a “transition period,” noting that the Trump administration has cut government spending, which he blamed for high inflation after the COVID-19 pandemic.