Nissan cuts profit forecast in first report since ousting Ghosn
Life after Carlos Ghosn is off to a rocky start for Nissan.
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Life after Carlos Ghosn is off to a rocky start for Nissan.
The latest news from Sears was hardly worth the wait.
Target rode a hot US economy to its strongest quarter in more than a decade.
So much for all those worries that Walmart was losing ground to Amazon.
Disney won the battle to purchase most of 21st Century Fox. Now it's getting ready to fight the streaming wars.
Pizza Hut doesn't seem to be benefiting from the turmoil at Papa John's.
Investors aren't pleased with what they're hearing from Corporate America.
Four months after the Cambridge Analytica scandal humbled Facebook and shaved tens of billions of dollars from its market value, the company's stock is once again trading at record highs.
Netflix is such a juggernaut that it added "only" 5.2 million subscribers last quarter, and everyone is hitting the panic button.
People in China, Argentina and Russia and many other emerging markets are just like Americans. They are huge fans of Doritos and Cheetos. And that's great news for Pepsi, the owner of both brands.
Back in February, Dick's Sporting Goods made a bold decision to stop selling assault style rifles and high capacity magazines, and to raise the minimum age to purchase a gun to 21.
Good news for Target: Online sales are booming. Bad news for Target: It's spending so much to play catch up to Amazon that it's hurting its profits.
Spotify's first earnings report as a public company hit the wrong note for investors.
The Coors Light Silver Bullet train missed the station in a big way.
The parent company of Coach spent nearly $3 billion in the past few years to buy the Kate Spade clothing and handbag label and the Stuart Weitzman shoe brand. Those deals are looking like a fashion flop.
McDonald's is raising prices, and it's not scaring off fans of the Big Mac.
The arrests of two black men at a Philadelphia store have not hurt sales so far.
Amazon is unstoppable.
Chipotle hiked its prices, opened new restaurants, and its new CEO is out making promises of a bright future. And investors are loving it.
Forget Facebook, Amazon and those other tech companies. One of the hottest stocks on Wall Street is a company that makes social connections by delivering pizza.
Boeing thinks 2018 is going to be special.
Shoppers flocked to Target stores -- and the company's website -- during the holidays. But it wasn't enough to satisfy investors, some of whom may have been disappointed to see that Target was already raising its minimum wage again.
Buying and selling individual stocks or actively managed mutual funds that charge big fees is so 20th century.