(Bloomberg) -- A startup stock exchange aiming to handle trades around the clock won a US watchdog’s approval to operate a venue 23 hours daily, five days a week.Most Read from BloombergIn Traffic-Weary Toronto, a Battle Breaks Out Over Bike LanesIn Italy’s Motor City, Car-Free Options Are GrowingNew York City’s ‘Living Breakwaters’ Brace for Stormier Seas24X National Exchange, which counts Steve Cohen’s Point72 Ventures fund as a backer, secured permission to start offering sessions that span t
North Korean hackers have stolen billions in crypto by posing as VCs, recruiters and IT workers
A venture capitalist, a recruiter from a big company, and a newly hired remote IT worker might not seem to have much in common, but all have been caught as imposters secretly working for the North Korean regime, according to security researchers. On Friday at Cyberwarcon, an annual conference in Washington DC focused on disruptive threats in cyberspace, security researchers offered their most up-to-date assessment of the threat from North Korea. The researchers warned of a sustained attempt by the country's hackers to pose as prospective employees seeking work at multinational corporations, with the aim of earning money for the North Korean regime and stealing corporate secrets that benefit its weapons program.
Is MicroStrategy creating the next big Bitcoin bubble?
What happens to Bitcoin after Michael Saylor's 'infinite money glitch' wears off?
Is Trump Media Going to Acquire a Cryptocurrency Trading Business? Here's What That Could Mean for the Stock.
Trump Media & Technology Group (NASDAQ: DJT) isn't profitable or generating much revenue, but the one thing it does have is cash, and it could soon put that to work. What is Bakkt Holdings? Earlier this year, the struggling stock also completed a 1-for-25 reverse stock split to help prop up its value and stay above the $1 needed to remain listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
Bitcoin Miners Approach $40B Market Cap as Difficulty Set for Fifth Straight Increase
The bitcoin hashrate is still soaring as mining difficulty looks to increase for a fifth consecutive time.
Stock market today: Indexes traded mixed as investors await fresh inflation data
Traders are eyeing potentially hotter inflation, and dialing back their bets for Fed rate cuts into next year.
UltraShort Bitcoin ETF Offering 2x Inverse Returns Sees Record Volume as BTC Holds Above $90K
UltraShort Bitcoin ETF Offering 2x Inverse Returns Sees Record Volume as BTC Holds Above $90K
Emerging-Market Currencies Wobble While Brazil Sees Selloff
(Bloomberg) -- Emerging-market currencies closed little changed after being whipsawed in a session marked by low trading volume before the US holiday and a steep selloff for Brazilian assets. Most Read from BloombergIn Traffic-Weary Toronto, a Battle Breaks Out Over Bike LanesIn Italy’s Motor City, Car-Free Options Are GrowingNew York City’s ‘Living Breakwaters’ Brace for Stormier SeasIn Kansas City, a First-Ever Stadium Designed for Women’s Sports Takes the FieldLosses for Brazil’s real mixed w
Morning Bid: Tech stocks drag US indexes lower as tariff talk clouds markets
Investors were grappling with fresh U.S. inflation data and its implications for Federal Reserve policy along with continued fallout from Donald Trump's tariff pledges as trading in the U.S. was thinning out ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday. Asian markets were waking up to a tepid day for U.S. equities, with technology shares leading major indexes lower. Data showed the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index -- an inflation gauge followed by the Fed -- rose 2.3% in the 12 months through October, a slight uptick from the prior month.
Consumer-related stocks help lift TSX to record closing high
(Reuters) -Canada's stock market rose to a record high on Wednesday, led by gains for the utilities and consumer-related sectors, as long-term borrowing costs fell and investors grew less anxious about the prospect of sweeping U.S. tariffs on imports from Canada. The Toronto Stock Exchange's S&P/TSX composite index ended up 83.16 points, or 0.3%, at 25,488.30, eclipsing the record closing high it posted on Friday. Investors have "had a day to think about the tariff situation and maybe it's not as bad as they originally thought," said Michael Sprung, president of Sprung Investment Management.