The Week in Business: The Twitter Deal
The U.S. economy shrinks, but still shows it’s still resilient. The Fed meets this week and is expected to approve a larger-than-usual rate increase.
The U.S. economy shrinks, but still shows it’s still resilient. The Fed meets this week and is expected to approve a larger-than-usual rate increase.
The man who helped give the world candy-colored computers eventually walked out the door. What does that mean for the company’s next big thing?
Fear among older and other vulnerable people is building as war in Ukraine aggravates energy costs that inflation had already pushed higher.
The S&P 500 plunged nearly 9 percent in April, its worst monthly decline since March 2020, as rising interest rates and high inflation raised concerns about consumer sentiment.
The grocery delivery start-up changed its leadership, slashed its valuation and shifted its strategy after sales slowed.
Work wear reflects how people feel about their jobs and the economy as a whole. So it makes sense that dressing for the office is all over the place.
Elon Musk joined an amicus brief that could have big implications for how the S.E.C. brings cases and whether defendants who settle can ever talk about them.
The company knew of the infestation at a West Memphis, Ark., distribution center but continued to distribute its products anyway, according to a suit filed by the state attorney general.
Financially speaking, the billionaire’s buyout of the social media network breaks all the usual rules.
It’s highly unusual to move from a “poison pill” to a $44 billion deal in under two weeks. But Twitter’s board ran out of options.