Business

As Coal Plants Shutter, a Chance to Redevelop ‘the Gates of Hell’

After the Cleveland Electric Illuminating Company flipped the switch on its sprawling new Avon Lake site in 1926, the brick…

For Goldman Sachs, No Bad News Is Good News After a Brutal Stretch

The Wall Street bank disclosed $2 billion in quarterly profit, just above expectations and propelling the bank further in its…

U.S. Tightens China’s Access to Advanced Chips for Artificial Intelligence

The further limits on shipments could cripple Beijing’s A.I. ambitions and dampen revenues for U.S. chip makers, analysts said.

Business Leaders Face a Dilemma Over ‘Davos in the Desert’

The Future Investment Initiative kicks off in Riyadh next week, with questions swirling over who will attend and who will…

A Higher Monthly Payment, but Less Square Footage

Homebuilders are responding to rising interest rates with an innovation: a small house in the traditionally spacious exurbs.

Those Doritos Too Expensive? More Stores Offer Their Own Alternatives.

Retailers are expanding their own private-label food and beverage offerings, attracting customers looking for less expensive options.

LinkedIn Cuts 668 Jobs in Second Layoff Round This Year

The 3 percent reduction in the company’s global work force follows 716 layoffs in May.

More Than 400,000 Student Loan Borrowers Had Wrong Monthly Payments

The Education Department said miscalculations had caused many borrowers to see higher monthly payments than they actually owed.

Bill Ford Says U.A.W. Strike Is Helping Tesla and Toyota

Mr. Ford, the executive chairman of Ford Motor, said nonunion automakers would make gains against Michigan automakers because of strikes…

China Bet It All on Real Estate. Now Its Economy Is Paying the Price.

After relying on a borrow-to-build model for decades, Beijing must make difficult choices about the country’s housing market and economic…

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