ANALYSIS

Bernanke Speech: For Now, No QE3, But Stay Tuned

U.S. Federal Reserve
In his Jackson Hole, Wyo. conference speech, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said, in so many words, that headwinds -- some organic, some Capitol Hill-ish -- confronting the U.S. economy are strong, but the Fed is stronger.
U.S. Economy

GDP Revision: U.S. Economy Grew Just 1.0% in Second Quarter

The U.S. economy grew at a worse-than-expected 1.0 percent rate in the second quarter, the U.S. Commerce Department announced Friday, in its second estimate for the quarter, as lower export growth and a slowdown in inventory build-up braked the world's largest economy to near-stall speed.
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Apple's Steve Jobs.

Steve Jobs' Health: The Recent History

Steve Jobs co-founder of Apple (AAPL), a visionary, and the driving force behind one of the United States' premiere and most trail-blazing companies in the modern/postmodern era, has had several medical leaves.
A woman talks on her phone as she walks past T-mobile and Sprint wireless stores in New York

October iPhone 5 a Boon for Apple, Not Sprint

Sprint may finally jump on the bandwagon and join its rivals in offering Apple's products, starting with none other than the iPhone 5. Bbut this may not prove to be such a boon to the No.3 U.S. carrier.
100 dollar bank notes and 10,000 yen notes.

Dollar Slump Could Worsen With Bernanke QE3

Investors are agonizing over the prospect of another round of quantitative easing that could come from the Fed chairman Ben Bernanke’s Jackson Hole summit later this week.
Study Doubts FDA'S Anti-Smoking Label Campaign

Usefulness of Grim Anti-Smoking Warnings Doubted

Mandatory anti-smoking warnings on U.S. cigarette packs are being challenged, this time by researchers who say the combination of grotesque images and explicit messages may not be effective in curbing smoking.
Australian Stock Market

U.S. Stocks: Is Dow 11,000 a Top or a Bottom?

You can’t blame investors for feeling slightly queasy about the U.S. stock market these days. One day of relatively positive data points is followed by a day with enough bad news to keep a stock investor up at night. But based on a condensed, cross-methodological analysis, in which direction is the Dow likely to head in the next six months?
For Discussion: U.S. Housing Sector

New Home Sales Decline for Third Straight Month, Likely to Weigh on U.S. Economy

New home sells fell in July to a 298,000-unit annual rate, the third straight monthly decline for the beleaguered sector. The slump means housing is likely to be a drag on U.S. GDP at least for the next two quarters, and perhaps for longer. New home prices are attractive, but potential buyers should traead carefully: they may drop in many markets.
U.S. Budget Debate

U.S. Budget: Will Tea Party Threaten Another Government Shutdown in October?

You thought the U.S. debt deal ended the feud between Democrats and Republicans? Hardly. The U.S. Government's new fiscal year, fiscal 2012, starts Oct. 1 -- and a budget must be passed by Sept. 30. A key unknown is: will the Tea Party threaten to shut down the government again, if it doesn't get most of what it wants?
Mike Lazaridis, president and co-CEO of Research in Motion

RIM Debuts BlackBerry Curve: Five Reasons RIM Might Die

HP's TouchPad could touch Apple's iPad, but BlackBerry maker Research in Motion still thinks its smartphones can touch Apple's iPhone. Never mind that the iPhone keeps leaving the BlackBerry, the original hit smartphone, behind. RIM keeps trying. Tuesday, RIM announced three new BlackBerry smartphones, including the all-new BlackBerry Curve 9350, BlackBerry Curve 9360, and BlackBerry Curve 9370.
For Discussion: U.S. Stock Market

U.S. Stock Market: Is Dow 11,000 a Top or a Starting Point?

You can’t blame investors for feeling slightly queasy about the U.S. stock market these days. One day of relatively positive data points is followed by a day with enough bad news to keep a stock investor up at night. But based on a condensed, cross-methodological analysis, in which direction is the Dow likely to head in the next six months?
Standard & Poor's President Deven Sharma

S&P President to Step Down; McGraw-Hill Shows its Regret Over Downgrade

S&P couldn't take back its U.S. debt rating downgrade that rocked global financial markets. Once it was done, it was done. But now we know the agency embroiled in controversy for two weeks since its Aug. 5 downgrade was met with corporate regret. The ratings agency said Tuesday that Deven Sharma, S&P's president since 2007, will sept down. He will be succeeded on Sept. 12 by Citibank Chief Operating Officer Douglas Peterson. The move caps two weeks of controversy that has embroiled the com...
U.S. Postal Service faces doomsday.

U.S. Postal Service Braced for Massive Cuts

Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe is proposing some dramatic changes to cut costs – including the firing of one-fifth of all employees (some 220,000 people) either through layoffs or attrition; the elimination of Saturday mail delivery; and the closing of nearly 4,000 post offices across the country.
At Issue: Oil Prices

Sanders Sponsors Bill to Curb Oil Speculation

U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., says speculators have contributed to oil’s high price – hurting the U.S. economy and wreaking havoc on family budgets, and he’s proposed a bill that he believes will help stop it.
The Apple iPad 2 is shown during its launch event in San Francisco, March 2

HP's TouchPad Couldn't Touch iPad; Could a New Tablet from Amazon?

HP's TouchPad was an OK product according to reviews, but it lived a very short product life because consumers showed a hearty appetite for Apple's tablet-leading iPad. Now, many are asking if Apple's iPad will ever have a worthy competitor. At the moment, however, there's no competitor on the horizon ready to challenge the iPad.
U.S. Job Market

Unemployment Rate Rises in 28 States in July as Companies Adopt Cautious Stance

The unemployment rate rose in more than half of the nation's states in July, as the slowdown in economic growth prompted companies to take a wait-and-see stance regarding new hires. The major period of lay-offs appears to be over, but the hiring has not resumed en masse, which has kept the nation's unemployment rate stubbornly high at 9.1 percent,

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