As the US — and everywhere else — has digested multi-year inflation, pressure has mounted disproportionately on the restaurant sector.
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On Tuesday, Spotify put out a press statement saying that its collective payments to the music industry for 2024 totaled $10 billion.
The stakes could hardly be larger for General Motors, which pitched a simple message to investors: We have a plan and the future is bright.
Behind the blinding white light of Monday’s trillion–dollar AI wipeout that was a spot of unabashedly good AI news.
Tesla was a notable absentee from this week’s Shanghai Auto Show, where Volkswagen and other carmakers debuted new offerings.
Nuclear energy, which has in the past often suffered from much-missed deadlines and ballooning costs, is having a moment.
The pandemic saw a flurry of investment in biotech startups but the past three years have seen shrinking investments in the sector.
The US is the WHO’s biggest donor, chipping in roughly 18% of the organization’s $2 billion to $3 billion annual budget.
Toymaker Hasbro crushed expectations in its latest quarter, but its annual guidance hasn’t been updated to consider potential tariffs.
Its recent patent adds to several for cryogenic storage that works in tandem with server farms.
Rest assured, competitors Deloitte, Ernst & Young, and PricewaterhouseCoopers are likely to follow in KPMG’s tracks.
President Donald Trump used the first hours of his second term in office Monday to make the emergency declaration.
It was only last year that 737 felt like the number of scandals Boeing was embroiled in, rather than the name of its narrow-body aircraft.
With Hollywood conquered, Netflix has a new goal: reach a $1 trillion market cap by 2030, according to a Wall Street Journal report.
Banks pocketed huge sums in the first quarter from equities because the “increased market volatility” triggered a rush on transactions.
As a share of US GDP, the manufacturing sector has decreased from a nearly 25% peak in the 1950s to about 11% today.