Articles

This Trump-linked company’s stock-sale plan is more than double its market value

Phunware’s stock tumbled Tuesday toward the lowest price seen since January, after the mobile-advertising software company announced a relatively large stock-sale program.

Trader Joe’s new $3.99 mini insulated tote bag is already reselling for $100 or more on eBay and Facebook Marketplace

Trader Joe’s mini insulated tote bags dropped on June 4 and were reselling for 25 times as much the same day.

With MDMA on the brink of FDA approval, psychedelic medicine faces a critical moment

A panel of independent advisers to the Food and Drug Administration is meeting Wednesday to discuss the agency’s potential approval of MDMA-assisted therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder, marking a pivotal moment for the booming field of psychedelic medicine.

‘Please, please stop filming us’: Chipotle employees rail against being filmed and say it won’t get you bigger portions

“There have been no changes in our portion sizes,” Chipotle’s chief corporate affairs officer said.

Biden’s new border move aims to win over voters but there’s reason for skepticism

The Biden administration on Tuesday rolled out new executive actions that aim to deny asylum to migrants who illegally enter the U.S. at the southern border, but analysts expressed doubts about the move.

3 ways to make the most of summer discounts at Target, Walmart, Amazon and more

Five retailers — Target, Walmart, Amazon, Aldi and Walgreens — have slashed prices. But only one says the discounts are permanent.

Women are America’s safety net. Holding society together is wearing them down.

Policy makers and business leaders have shifted financial risks onto American families, and women in particular, according to sociologist Jessica Calarco.

Why does an entry-level job now require three years of experience? Here’s how that hurts workers and companies alike.

“We’re not helping people learn how to get proficient in their jobs,” one Wharton professor says. That could hurt young college grads.

Job openings in U.S. fall to 3-year low as labor market cools

The number of job openings in the U.S. sank to more than three-year low of 8.1 million in April, another sign the labor market is cooling off as the economy slows.

Traders expect a hawkish cut from the ECB. What it means for markets.

The ECB will trim rates from a record high but will be cautious on the pace of future cuts

Standard Chartered processed payments for terror groups and Iran, lawsuit says

The British bank processed billions worth of payments on behalf of sanctioned entities including Al-Qaeda and Hamas, a lawsuit says

U.S. factory orders rise for third straight month in April

New orders rise 0.7%, in line with expectations
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