With Inflation This High, Nobody Knows What a Dollar Is Worth
Strong reactions to rising prices and misunderstandings about the value of money are rampant, our columnist says.
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Strong reactions to rising prices and misunderstandings about the value of money are rampant, our columnist says.
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Hopes for substantial cuts in interest rates are fading as inflation shows more staying power than expected.
By Jeanna Smialek and
The tire maker vowed to ensure that none of its workers would struggle to make ends meet.
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On Fox and in other conservative outlets, the protests have given new lease to a long-running argument that students at elite universities are intolerant of conservative views.
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Americans Went All-In on Self-Storage. That Demand Is Suddenly Cooling.
Many developers, spurred by the pandemic to invest money in new self-storage facilities, have been caught short by this drop in demand.
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Daimler Truck Workers Reach Deal and Avert Threatened Strike in North Carolina
The United Automobile Workers reached an agreement involving workers who make Freightliner trucks and Thomas Built buses. The deal comes as the union seeks to expand its membership in southern states.
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Auto Safety Regulator Investigating Tesla Recall of Autopilot
The National Highway Safety Administration also released an analysis of crashes involving the system that showed at least 29 fatal accidents over five and a half years.
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Exxon Mobil and Chevron Report Lower Earnings
Profits for the two oil giants, which are locked in a standoff over drilling off the coast of Guyana, were squeezed by lower profitability for refining crude and falling natural gas prices.
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Louisiana Will No Longer Require Students to Fill Out FAFSA to Graduate
Experts say high school seniors are more likely to go to college if they complete the financial aid form, but the state sees privacy issues with mandating it.
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The relatively small bank, the first to fail this year, will have its deposits assumed by another Pennsylvania lender, Fulton Bank.
By Kashmir Hill
The early results suggest that pasteurization is killing the H5N1 virus in milk, something that regulators were not certain of.
By Noah Weiland and Benjamin Mueller
He was once a staunch ally of the company’s biggest owner, Shari Redstone, but the relationship soured in recent months.
By Benjamin Mullin and Lauren Hirsch
He heralded stock options and golden parachutes as a professor at Harvard Business School, influencing a generation of Wall Street executives.
By Michael S. Rosenwald
The proposal had been years in the making, in an effort to curb death rates of Black smokers targeted by Big Tobacco. In an election year, the president’s worries about support among Black voters may have influenced the postponement.
By Christina Jewett and Noah Weiland
Meta has already spent billions on developing artificial intelligence, and it plans to spend billions more.
By Marie Solis
Stubborn inflation has led traders to forecast far fewer rate cuts by the Federal Reserve than just a few months ago.
By Jeanna Smialek
When Rogelio Villarreal bought rose-gold earrings for a price that the luxury retailer said was a mistake, he looked to a Mexican consumer protection law. He later said the company delivered the earrings.
By Emily Schmall
Allies of the former president are said to be devising plans to reduce the central bank’s independence if he is re-elected, a move that would have big consequences for monetary policy.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Ravi Mattu, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch and Ephrat Livni
The U.S. secretary of state and the Chinese leader struck conciliatory notes in Beijing. But there was no budging on, or hiding, their governments’ core differences.
By Ana Swanson and Vivian Wang
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