To prepare for a slowdown of global trade, US retailers spent months building a massive inventory to prevent empty shelves.
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Saudi Arabia, the biggest and most influential member of OPEC, is abandoning its goal of driving the price of an oil barrel up to $100.
TikTok is calling it quits on a music streaming business that barely made it out the door, and only launched trials last year.
The Biden administration is introducing a ban on both hardware and software for “connected vehicles” from China and, incidentally, Russia.
Canada’s Liberal Party won a majority promising to distance the country from the US, a major importer of Canadian crude.
The International Longshoremen’s Association is set to strike if a new contract can’t be reached with the United States Maritime Alliance.
The insurance industry needs to be careful when using AI, or else AI black boxes could render consumers uninsurable without any explanation.
Walmart will soon roll out an option that would allow consumers to pay for online orders directly via instant bank account transfers.
As the US — and everywhere else — has digested multi-year inflation, pressure has mounted disproportionately on the restaurant sector.
On Monday, BP announced it will put its US onshore wind power business, estimated to be worth about $2 billion, on the market.
A Labour Party official said he’d like to see legislation that heavily impacts imports of Chinese textiles — a potential problem for Shein.
Days after industrial workers in its Pacific Northwest plants voted to approve a labor strike, Boeing instituted a hiring freeze.
Tesla was a notable absentee from this week’s Shanghai Auto Show, where Volkswagen and other carmakers debuted new offerings.
The warnings come as the industry adapts to seismic shifts in technology — which means it may just have some new tricks up its sleeve.
China is a top global producer of 30 of the 50 minerals the US considers critical, and is sources more than half of the US annual supply.
With Hollywood conquered, Netflix has a new goal: reach a $1 trillion market cap by 2030, according to a Wall Street Journal report.