Paul Tudor Jones on why the market crashed in 1987
Legendary hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones reflects on trading the crash of 1987.
The battery start-up might reach its ambitions sooner than expected.
This historically flawless predictive tool has accurately foreshadowed what's to come for the U.S. economy since 1959.
There is no shortage of reasons to be bearish about this business.
These three low-volatility, dividend-growth stocks offer the potential to rebound while trading near decade-low valuations.
Energy Transfer has a huge 8% yield, but you'd be better off with this still massive, 7.3%-yielding alternative.
Multiple growth drivers and strong secular tailwinds should combine to drive this artificial intelligence (AI) pioneer higher.
While the energy sector has gotten off to a hot start this year, opportunities in master limited partnerships (MLP) stick out from the crowd.
Intel was hit with more bad news that has enormous implications for investors.
AI startup Anthropic is changing its policies to allow minors to use its generative AI systems -- in certain circumstances, at least. Announced in a post on the company's official blog Friday, Anthropic will begin letting teens and preteens use third-party apps (but not its own apps, necessarily) powered by its AI models so long as the developers of those apps implement specific safety features and disclose to users which Anthropic technologies they're leveraging. In a support article, Anthropic lists several safety measures devs creating AI-powered apps for minors should include, like age verification systems, content moderation and filtering and educational resources on "safe and responsible" AI use for minors.
You won't catch Warren Buffett chasing the latest stock market trend, but many companies in Berkshire Hathaway's portfolio are benefiting from AI nonetheless.