Oil prices resume their rise, but U.S. stocks hold steadier this time around
Australia raises benchmark rate as concern grows about inflation while Fed expected to stand pat
- By: Stan Choe, The Associated Press
- March 17, 2026 March 17, 2026
- 09:23
Australia raises benchmark rate as concern grows about inflation while Fed expected to stand pat
Sales dip 8.1% compared with last February
It’s time for advisors to speak more plainly about private markets and the risks associated with them
Nvidia rises after CEO projects US$1 trillion in demand for AI chips through 2027
'Tepid' bounce-back unlikely to change overall cooling trend: economist
Canadians poured $96.2B into mutual funds, a new quarterly record
U.S. and Mexico will start trade talks with Canada joining later
Firms with big fuel bills, Nvidia, trade higher
Economists expect oil shock will fuel higher inflation in months ahead
Investors sift through "ugly" jobs report in Canada, U.S. economic data
Iran War has choked off most tanker transport through the Strait of Hormuz
GDP and jobs growth, inflation, are weighing on consumer sentiment
Five-year plan doubles down on tech investment for growth
PM is also seeking to fast-track northern road, hydro projects
Motor vehicle sales dropped 38.9%, to their lowest level since 2021
Layoffs and number of Americans quitting their jobs both fell slightly
Core prices jumped 0.4% for the second straight month
Revised number is half the original estimate
"Very bad" jobs report pushes unemployment rate to 6.7%
Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. and Suncor Energy Inc. gained 3.10% and 2.98%, respectively
The price of a barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, got as high as US$101.59 overnight
The International Energy Agency has agreed to release 400 million barrels of oil from member nations' stockpiles
The agency reported a $1.3 billion trade deficit in December
The U.S. energy secretary said the supply of global oil is facing a ‘significant disruption’
Tom Lee told attendees at the Future Proof Citywide festival in Miami that expanding retail investor access to private markets is a mistake