News
Welcome to the Money blog, Sky News' personal finance and consumer hub. Today: ASOS customers are upset after accounts were ...
As new tariffs take effect as part of President Donald Trump 's trade policy, cybersecurity experts are sounding the alarm: scammers are seizing this moment of confusion to trick consumers into ...
Amazon,Costco and Home Depot have pulled forward their inventory purchases to mitigate the impact of tariffs. Purchasing inventory in advance will help ensure a company has product in stock down ...
In brief: Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has assured the company's shareholders that Trump's tariffs have neither increased average selling prices of items on the site nor have they affected consumer demand.
Amazon sellers are waking up to a new reality: After extra U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports reached 145% in April, they’ve been rolled back to 30% for 90 days (as of the time of this writing).
Global economic and geopolitical conditions. Tariff and trade policies. They were all among the factors that Amazon.com Inc. cited when it issued a forecast late Thursday for profit to fall ...
Amazon recorded roughly $1 billion of one-time charges on Thursday. Tariffs and customer returns are ongoing concerns for Amazon. Amazon's Q1 results beat estimates, but future guidance fell short.
Amazon AMZN.O on Thursday tried to temper investor concerns about the impact of the Trump administration's tariffs on its e-commerce business, but the company may have few options left to ensure ...
In Amazon’s Q1 2025 earnings call, CEO Andy Jassy touched on the potential impact of the Trump administration’s tariffs, and he seems to think that Amazon won’t be affected too harshly.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results