U.S. stocks rose for the second session in a row Monday, with the S&P; 500 ending just shy of a record.
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The kingdom will open its $590 billion stock market to foreigners, one of the last major bourses to have remained mostly shut to international investors, in June.
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Nearly five years after the “flash crash”, those who have studied it warn some form of a repeat event can’t be ruled out.
European stocks rose, supported by robust manufacturing data across the region.
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Shareholders are taking advantage of booming markets to sell stock, lifting block trades in Asia to record highs.
Studies show men and women could learn from the other’s approach to investing and retirement.
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A large pile of debt at India’s big infrastructure companies is complicating Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s plans to boost the country’s economy and improve its woeful roads, electric grids and other public works.
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As debt has grown across Asia, an increasing portion of the lending has come from nonbank lenders—raising regulators’ concerns.
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China shares rebounded from early losses as data suggested Beijing may need to further bolster the economy, while Indonesia and the Philippines both bounced back from losses last week.
Greece’s standoff with creditors has slashed trading in its government bonds, with prices swinging wildly recently.
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The first Chinese company to default on the principal of a locally-issued bond said it would repay investors 35% of what it borrowed.
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Patrick Honohan, who steered Ireland’s central bank through the most fraught period in its history, will step down before the end of the year.
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Stocks, currencies and bonds in the developing world have taken off, but difficulties that weighed them down early in the year are likely to return to the forefront, investors and analysts say.