Disney CEO Bob Iger told CNBC he plans to stay only for two years, as his contract calls for.
Jim Cramer said that he’s intrigued by current winners like Tesla, Meta Platforms and Nvidia.
“It’s insane that so many people seem to believe the Fed will go from slamming the brakes on the economy to hitting the gas within a matter of months,” he said.
Microsoft is planning to let companies, schools and governments create their own chatbots with OpenAI’s ChatGPT for purposes like customer service.
China’s economy will expand by 5% in 2023, Fitch Ratings said in a revised forecast on Wednesday – an improved outlook from its previous 4.1% growth prediction from December.
The cryptocurrency struggled to hold the $23,000 level in the previous session as the rally loses momentum.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned that defaulting on the debt ceiling would lead to financial catastrophe.
Jim Cramer explained why he doesn’t believe the economy will enter a severe recession.
India will secure oil from anywhere as long as the terms are beneficial, India’s energy minister Hardeep Singh Puri told CNBC.
People of color on dialysis have a higher risk of staph bloodstream infections than white people, according to the CDC.
Elon Musk tweeted Sunday that the last few months have been “extremely tough,” but said that Twitter is “now trending to break even.”
Nearly 40% of CEOs think their companies won’t be “economically viable” within the next decade without major changes, PwC’s annual global CEO survey found.
Hilton CEO Chris Nassetta says buying a black Porsche 944 for $20,000 was the worst purchase he ever made—especially because he made $17,000 a year at the time.
Job and wage growth are strong, layoffs are low and workers are quitting at high rates. Here’s what to know about a trove of labor data issued this week.
WWE Chairman Vince McMahon is open to leaving the company forever if he finds the right sale, CEO Nick Khan told CNBC.
Chinese authorities said Friday that a suspected Beijing-operated spy balloon spotted hovering over sensitive U.S. airspace was in fact a civilian airship intended for scientific research.