International Markets

International Markets Articles

It turns out that there may just be a few points driving all this gold demand. And to make matters even more complex, those pressures may only get stronger ahead.
The Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has decided to leave interest rates unchanged at its two-day June meeting. This should hardly be a surprise to any economist or to any...
One thing the Brexit vote did was to knock down four top European dividend stocks that many of the firms we cover on Wall Street are very positive on.
24/7 Wall St. wanted to offer up some of the key outside views which have been offered by economists, analysts and research shops for the post-Brexit vote. These have been compiled in a quote...
Britain has voted to leave the European Union. They never shared currencies, but they shared in trade and in many common laws and practices. One of the side outcomes of the Brexit vote is that polls...
Perhaps the move for a rapid exit by Britain from the European Union (or Brexit) may have been interrupted due to a political murder of M.P. Jo Cox on Thursday. As this was a member of parliament,...
The largest defense importer this year was Saudi Arabia. The second was India, which raises the question of why it needs to so many weapons.
Tuvalu's gross domestic product is listed at $39 million. How does such a tiny economy function?
Reuters reported Monday that some industry sources expect Boeing to strike a deal with Iran Air "fairly soon" for 100 new Boeing jets.
Merrill Lynch now believes that the time has come to move back into emerging markets from developed markets.
On top of news that money outflows out of Russia have slowed in 2016, Credit Suisse's emerging markets investing team has lifted its weighting for Russia.
Passenger car sales rose 11% in China last year, the slowest pace in the past three years. And more than half of foreign brand sales were outside the country's largest cities.
The trade deficit came in at a wider-than-expected $47 billion in February, primarily due to a rising cross-border demand.
The economic impact of social shocks is undeniable, and perhaps more relevant now than at any time over the past 10 years.
So who will benefit as Iran returns tot he oil market? UBS thinks two industry leaders will be the main players in what could prove to be a volatile, but growth-oriented landscape.