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Don’t get too excited for cheaper Taylor Swift tickets: The rules just force sellers to present all the extra fees upfront.
Sometimes, markets don’t need breathless buzzwords to get excited. Sometimes, “marginally encouraging” will do. Ask Pfizer shareholders.
It’s part of the EU’s goal to build its own spacefaring infrastructure, reducing its dependence on US private companies.
Netflix is rolling out the first major redesign of its home hub since 2013, hoping people might watch more if inundated with less.
The Fed may have cracked inflation, but eggflation is proving harder to beat. Unsurprisingly, egg producer stocks are soaring.
After making itself an integral part of the supply chain for generative AI, Nvidia is eyeing other futuristic tech bets.
A day after antitrust enforcers successfully blocked Albertsons’ planned sale to Kroger, the former filed a lawsuit against the latter.
DoorDash binged Wednesday on British delivery rival Deliveroo, which it is set to acquire in a $3.9 billion deal.
The transaction would create the world’s largest advertising agency — that is, if you don’t count Big Tech players like Google and Amazon.
A federal appeals court upheld the “TikTok Ban” that would force China-based ByteDance to sell its app next month or face exile from the US.
The global oil cartel announced it would be extending its ongoing production cuts through the first few months of next year.
Microsoft hasn’t signed off on OpenAI’s dramatic reversal of its onetime plan to become a for-profit venture.
To prepare for a slowdown of global trade, US retailers spent months building a massive inventory to prevent empty shelves.
Canada’s Liberal Party won a majority promising to distance the country from the US, a major importer of Canadian crude.
As the US — and everywhere else — has digested multi-year inflation, pressure has mounted disproportionately on the restaurant sector.