The stock has been on a roller coaster ever since Mr. Trump’s election. The shares are down about 13 percent this week.
President Trump is locked in a showdown with the world’s richest man, who is far from a typical opponent.
Brookfield Properties is shuffling the structure of its North American office business as it aggressively pursues acquisitions, particularly in New York.
Brookfield’s office segment is shifting to a function-driven management structure, jettisoning its past geography-based approach. The new leadership structure has six executives leading operations across North America, and the asset management firm has reduced its staff by six as part of the transition.
Damian Williams joined Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison in January shortly after stepping down as one of the nation’s top federal prosecutors. He is taking a job with Jenner & Block.
Downbeat business and consumer sentiment may not have translated into higher joblessness yet.
Employers added 139,000 jobs last month, continuing a steady run of hiring despite policy turmoil. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.2 percent.
Once a seemingly offhand remark at a campaign rally, President Trump’s pledge to not tax overtime could become federal law.
The central bank is in wait-and-see mode amid extreme uncertainty about the economic outlook.
The clash between the president and Teslas C.E.O. wiped billions off the electric vehicle maker’s market capitalization. Other risks abound.
The chief executives at Palantir, which scoops up data for the government, and Veeva Systems, a cloud-computing company, topped two lists of the highest-paid C.E.O.s.