This presidential election has been one of the most polarizing in U.S. history. Now that it is over, President Trump will get to work on a lengthy to-do list of challenges, questions and decisions on policies that will have a direct impact on...
Luxury condos in Manhattan outpace the S&P, advisors are overconfident on multi-generational wealth transfer and Michael Mahoney moves from Morgan Stanley to Snowden Lane.
Key gauges of investor uncertainty are lower now than they were leading up to Britain's vote to leave the EU.
The markets are rooting for political gridlock, Goldman Sach's election guide and wealthy Chinese are scooping up U.S. real estate, art, cars and stamps.
Regional Asian markets will be the first to trade on the results of Tuesday's presidential election.
Elections can matter for financial markets.
As companies run out of capital to fund further buybacks, it will expose how bad earnings trends look out into the future.
No matter who wins on Election Day, stay the course.
Just because there's more cash in the financial system doesn't necessarily mean that it's available to buy securities.
When Hillary Clinton does well, and/or Donald Trump slumps, the markets rise.