News - 2025-03-08

Daily News Explorer

The controversial cafe chain is expanding outside London but locals often have mixed feelings.

The backlash against the electric vehicle company has turned violent at times, as its billionaire chief executive parlays his support for President Trump into consequential influence over the federal government.

A new wave of consumer activism is sweeping the nation, with protests and boycotts targeting controversial companies, forcing Wall Street to brace for impact.

John Pastor-Mendoza, a Lyft driver, falsely posed as the ride that the women had requested and targeted victims who appeared intoxicated, the Denver district attorney said.

(Bloomberg) -- House Republicans announced a spending bill to keep government agencies open through Sept. 30, daring Democrats to vote against it and risk a disruptive March 15 shutdown.Most Read from BloombergNJ College to Merge With State School After Financial StressTrump Administration Plans to Eliminate Dozens of Housing OfficesRepublican Mayor Braces for Tariffs: ‘We Didn’t Budget for This’Where New York City's Zoning Reform Will Add HousingHow Upzoning in Cambridge Broke the YIMBY MoldThe

LMT
NOC

Staffing cuts at the IRS threaten to cripple collections and enforcement, former commissioners warn.

(Bloomberg) -- Wall Street traders this week were hit by the biggest cross-asset losses since the Federal Reserve’s monetary-tightening campaign peaked in 2023. Blame tariffs, softening growth, a potentially revitalized Europe, and more.Most Read from BloombergNJ College to Merge With State School After Financial StressTrump Administration Plans to Eliminate Dozens of Housing OfficesRepublican Mayor Braces for Tariffs: ‘We Didn’t Budget for This’Where New York City's Zoning Reform Will Add Housi

The exchange-traded fund industry is looking to give retail investors more access to alternative investments including private credit.

It's finally clear: President Trump has an adversarial relationship with financial markets.

Champions and critics of DEI policies are again pushing American companies to either bolster or diminish their diversity policies. But so far this year, none of the proposals are garnering shareholder support.

DE
AAPL
COST

The Future of News Looks Niche

Mar 8, 2025, 8:34 AM

The media entrepreneur Jessica Lessin chats with DealBook about the news landscape and her latest media bet.

Brackets may change. The standard deduction could fall. And President Trump will probably not remove taxes on Social Security income.

With employees from the so-called Department of Government Efficiency poking around in agency systems, faith in data security isn’t what it once was. The tool, an identity protection PIN, can help.

OKTA
CRWD

The victims pulled money out of their retirement accounts. The withdrawals had inflated their taxable income, even though the funds quickly disappeared.

PANW
JPM

Beijing, which set steep duties on canola, peas and pork, wants Canada and Mexico to resist U.S. pressure to raise tariffs on Chinese goods.

Shrinking cities have tried to stabilize their populations with foreign-born residents. The strategy was working, until the inauguration.

A city in southeastern Tennessee is drawing in homebuyers. That city is Chattanooga, nestled not far from the Tennessee-Georgia border.

President Trump has been trying to eliminate the tax loophole, which benefits Wall Street, but Congressional Republicans may stand in the way.

Real estate agent commissions have barely budged since NAR settlement rules took effect in August.

Investors don't think the wild swings in markets are over as uncertainty around President Trump's policies remains.

SPY
QQQ

The electric car company led by Elon Musk builds all the cars it sells in the United States in California and Texas, shielding it from tariffs that could devastate competitors.