Wall Street equities finished lower Thursday following a mixed US retail sales report, while European luxury stocks pushed higher following strong results from Cartier owner Richemont.
Richemont delivered stunning holiday quarter performance with luxury jewelry sales up 14%, while Signet reported holiday accessible/mass-market jewelry sales down 2%.
Strong bank earnings failed to sustain a rally on Wall Street, but stocks in Europe and Asia pushed higher. European and Asian indices gained after Wednesday's Wall Street rally.
Richemont, whose brands include Cartier and ... is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal. Morningstar Research Services’ chief market strategist Dave ...
we report that there might be potential disposals of underperforming brands in Richemont's portfolio. Still, we believe this might be seen as a positive catalyst by Wall Street analysts.
Analysts fell to the sidelines weighing in on Compagnie Financiere Richemont SA (CH:CFR – Research Report), Taylor Wimpey (GB:TW – Research
European luxury shares jumped Thursday after Cartier parent Richemont reported record quarterly sales, lifting investor hopes that the high-end sector is finally recovering from a slump caused by weak Chinese demand.
Wall Street equities finished lower Thursday following a mixed US retail sales report, while European luxury stocks pushed higher following strong results from Cartier owner Richemont. Major US ...
Richemont, whose brands include Cartier and ... is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal. We sell different types of products and services to both investment ...
NEW YORK/LONDON >> MSCI’s global equities gauge rose today, while Wall Street stocks dipped and U.S. Treasury yields fell after a mixed bag of economic data and Federal Reserve officials’ comments suggested more interest rate cuts on the horizon.
As the industry gathers at Paris Fashion Week, bosses are eyeing a revival in demand across the Atlantic to kick-start a recovery.
EXCLUSIVE: Jordan Belfort, the real-life Wolf of Wall Street, who was portrayed by Leonardo DiCaprio in Martin Scorsese’s movie, set up Stratton Oakmont in the late ‘80s with Danny Porush. This brokerage,