Entrepreneurs are being more cautious in response to shifts in the economy and rising wages.
A Commerce Department report will gauge sales at restaurants, stores and online in an economy with a strong labor market, easing inflation and rising interest rates.
Some shareholders saw the automaker’s decision to move up the deadline by two months as a way to suppress criticism during the company’s annual meeting on Tuesday.
China’s youth unemployment rate rose above 20% for the first time since Beijing began tracking the data five years ago.
New plans for Downtown Los Angeles and Hollywood that were decades in the making were approved earlier this month, bringing much-needed clarity for civic leaders, but industry leaders say the plans leave many of LA’s real estate problems unresolved.
The plans pave the way for Downtown to add 175,000 new residents and 100,000 new housing units over the next two decades, about 20% of the household growth forecast for the entire city. In Hollywood, the plan would allow the neighborhood to add another 35,000 units to its stock over the same period.
A provocative paper from researchers at Microsoft claims A.I. technology shows the ability to understand the way people do. Critics say those scientists are kidding themselves.
A group of plaintiffs had claimed that the bank misled investors about its progress in cleaning up after a sham accounts scandal a decade ago.
Twitter’s next CEO, Linda Yaccarino, is well-known for her tight relationship with ad agencies and her hard-nosed negotiating tactics. WSJ’s Suzanne Vranica explains what she can bring to the social media company.
Shareholders claimed the bank and its past leadership were moving slower to address regulatory issues than they acknowledged publicly.
The action, which stayed a lower court ruling, will require health plans to fully cover preventive services while the appeals process plays out.