Apple Will Revamp Siri to Catch Up to Its Chatbot Competitors
Apple plans to announce that it will bring generative A.I. to iPhones after the company’s most significant reorganization in a decade.
By Tripp Mickle, Brian X. Chen and
Apple plans to announce that it will bring generative A.I. to iPhones after the company’s most significant reorganization in a decade.
By Tripp Mickle, Brian X. Chen and
The women’s media company, which started as a raunchy college blog, is a rare financial success story — and on the White House’s radar. Now, it’s wrestling with how to grow up alongside its readers.
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Forget about endowments and their holdings and divestment for a minute. What do you stand for, and how can you make your portfolio reflect that?
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The administration could raise tariffs on electric vehicles from China to 100 percent in an attempt to protect American auto manufacturers.
By Alan Rappeport and
Target Scales Back Pride Month Displays After Backlash Last Year
It said Pride merchandise would be available on its website and in select stores next month. In 2023, the retailer featured the goods widely.
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A Pause for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program
The Education Department has temporarily stopped processing applications and other forms as it updates its systems and deals with problems plaguing the program.
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Judge Blocks New U.S. Rule Limiting Credit Card Late Fees
Set to take effect on Tuesday, the rule would save households $10 billion a year in “junk fees,” the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said.
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Our columnist spent the past month hanging out with 18 A.I. companions. They critiqued his clothes, chatted among themselves and hinted at a very different future.
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All the Rage in Private Equity: Mortgaging the Fund
A little-known financial tool was the talk of the Milken Institute’s Global Conference.
By Lauren Hirsch, Michael J. de la Merced, Bernhard Warner and
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The firm Hybe has lost hundreds of millions of dollars in market value because of a feud with the creative force behind the band NewJeans.
By Jin Yu Young
Electrical utilities said they weathered earlier conditions as persistent geomagnetic storms were expected to cause another light show in evening skies.
By Katrina Miller, Ivan Penn and Emmett Lindner
She was the first woman to own and run a major national advertising agency. Her company, Wells Rich Greene, was best known for the “I ♥ NY” campaign.
By Robert D. McFadden
A previously unknown focus of an I.R.S. audit is a dubious accounting maneuver that effectively meant taking the same write-offs twice on a Chicago skyscraper.
By Russ Buettner and Paul Kiel
A mainstay of the pizza and arcade chain, by turns endearing and creepy, will be phased out by year’s end at all but two locations. We visited one of them.
By Jesus Jiménez and Jackie Molloy
When corporate jousting, don’t choose jealousy.
By Roxane Gay
She came up with the feminist campaign, for a hair color product, when challenging the notions of men at her ad agency.
By Richard Sandomir
Our calculator takes the most important costs associated with buying or renting and compares the two options.
By Mike Bostock, Shan Carter, Archie Tse and Francesca Paris
Clear Channel, which manages many of the advertisements in the area, said a provocative billboard for a Molly Baz recipe was “flagged for review.”
By Alisha Haridasani Gupta
The payment system amounted to one of the most forceful actions taken so far by agriculture officials who have raced to keep up with the spread of the virus among dairy cows.
By Noah Weiland, Linda Qiu and Apoorva Mandavilli
Using advanced computers, he went from M.I.T. professor to multibillionaire. His Medallion fund had 66 percent average annual returns for decades.
By Jonathan Kandell
In a surprise announcement, bankruptcy lawyers for the cryptocurrency exchange FTX said customers would get all their money back, plus interest.
By Marie Solis
Officials said the decision would lower bills and encourage people to use cars and appliances that did not use fossil fuels, but some experts said it would discourage energy efficiency.
By Ivan Penn
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced a global $500 million campaign to shore up its financial future.
By Robin Pogrebin
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Lael Brainard, the director of the National Economic Council, said lawmakers should raise taxes on companies and the wealthiest while extending the 2017 cuts for those making less than $400,000.
By Jim Tankersley
Using index funds to make bets on these key categories is hazardous, our columnist says.
By Jeff Sommer
On earnings calls, dozens of corporate executives have cited a slowdown in spending to explain why sales are slipping.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Ravi Mattu, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch and Ephrat Livni
As the industrial landscape in Germany shifts, companies have formed an alliance aimed at offering the skills and certification that workers need to find new jobs.
By Melissa Eddy
Airlines are using artificial intelligence to save fuel, keep customers informed and hold connecting flights for delayed passengers. Here’s what to expect.
By Julie Weed
After a production shortfall in West Africa, cocoa prices rose to $4,000 a metric ton from $2,500. Then they went nuts.
By J. Edward Moreno
Gross domestic product increased 0.6 percent in the first quarter, after shrinking the two previous quarters.
By Eshe Nelson
Fed officials still think their next move will be to cut rates, but they are not entirely ruling out the possibility that they might have to raise them.
By Jeanna Smialek
The aircraft manufacturer and a union representing 125 firefighters are at odds over pay at the company’s plants in the Seattle area.
By Niraj Chokshi
Bruce Garelick was convicted of securities fraud for leaking confidential information about a merger involving the parent company of Truth Social, Donald Trump’s social media site.
By Matthew Goldstein
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Assumable mortgages — or low-rate mortgages that home buyers can take over from home sellers — are making a comeback. The process can be challenging.
By Tara Siegel Bernard
The Senate also passed a short-term extension of the current F.A.A. law to give the House time to clear the longer-term package early next week.
By Kayla Guo
After a decade of humorously reviewing games, the man known as Dunkey began a publishing company to support indie projects, starting with the mazelike Animal Well.
By Zachary Small
An activist investment firm failed to replace the railroad’s top executive and all its directors, but did win three seats on its board.
By Peter Eavis
If Sony and Apollo Global win the fight to buy the media company, they plan to keep the studio business and sell everything else.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Ravi Mattu, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch, Ephrat Livni, Benjamin Mullin and Cameron Joseph
A cut in interest rates could come as soon as this summer as the central bank forecast that inflation would drop to its 2 percent target.
By Eshe Nelson
Our columnist spent a month making A.I. friends. They offered small talk, companionship and even some surprisingly good advice.
By Kevin Roose and Karen Hanley
City officials worked to make Milan attractive to visitors, but now that some neighborhoods are overwhelmed by rowdy crowds and noise, they’re trying to scale back.
By Elisabetta Povoledo and Alessandro Grassani
An ad meant to show how the updated device can do many things has become a metaphor for a community’s fears of the technology industry.
By Tripp Mickle
CBS and other well-known properties would be sold if Sony and Apollo were able to buy Paramount. But the new owners would keep the movie studio.
By Benjamin Mullin and Lauren Hirsch
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The offering from Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery shows how rival companies are willing to work together to navigate an uncertain entertainment landscape.
By John Koblin
The gasoline-powered Malibu was the last sedan sold by Chevrolet, the General Motors brand, in the United States.
By Neal E. Boudette
The shot is no longer being manufactured or supplied, and it is no longer authorized for use in Europe.
By Rebecca Robbins
The company has racked up bills after long-running legal fights with regulators and cabdrivers.
By J. Edward Moreno
The president has proposed new barriers to Chinese electric vehicles, steel and other goods in an attempt to protect his manufacturing agenda.
By Jim Tankersley
The hedge fund is accused of borrowing money from banks to buy stocks.
By Matthew Goldstein
The popular video-sharing app faces uncertain odds as it takes its fight to court to turn back a potential ban in the United States.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Ravi Mattu, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch and Ephrat Livni
Adjusted operating profit was $76.1 million, an increase of about 41 percent from a year earlier.
By Benjamin Mullin
A year after a derailment in Ohio raised questions about rail safety, an investment firm is seeking to install new management in an effort to increase profits.
By Peter Eavis
The United States will triple its domestic chip manufacturing capacity by 2032, the largest increase in the world, according to a report from the Semiconductor Industry Association.
By Madeleine Ngo
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The decision could give the government power to force Google and other tech companies to limit access to “Glory to Hong Kong,” an anthem of 2019 protests.
By Tiffany May
Bankruptcy lawyers for FTX said customers of the cryptocurrency exchange were set to get all their money back, plus interest.
By David Yaffe-Bellany
Airport officials said Tuesday that a system outage affecting the Border Force’s immigration gates had caused long waits for passengers arriving in Britain. The issue was resolved early Wednesday.
By Orlando Mayorquín
Bad workplace behavior was pervasive at the bank regulator, according to an investigation that questioned whether things can improve without a change in leadership.
By Emily Flitter
A bipartisan group of lawmakers is pushing to add language to the reauthorization of the Federal Aviation Administration that would halt expansion of the technology.
By Luke Broadwater
The social media company and its Chinese parent, ByteDance, sued to challenge the new law, saying it violated users’ First Amendment rights.
By Sapna Maheshwari and David McCabe
The fast-casual chain aims to be climate neutral by 2027, but beef is a big contributor to climate change.
By Christina Morales
Wall Street has been debating how the investment giant’s $59 billion real estate fund has managed to outperform virtually all its rivals.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Ravi Mattu, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch and Ephrat Livni
In a surprise, Disney+ made money for the first time in the latest quarter, but the company said it expected a slowdown in its parks division.
By Brooks Barnes
For Olympics-goers and just plain vacationers, here are new accommodations that offer a special taste of France, Italy and Greece.
By Stephanie Rosenbloom
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A compliance officer for the cryptocurrency exchange told senior executives and Nigerian contacts that the company had been asked to pay $150 million in crypto.
By David Yaffe-Bellany and Emily Flitter
The Invisible Institute, a nonprofit newsroom with roughly a dozen journalists, was recognized for local and audio reporting.
By Benjamin Mullin
The London-based developer of artificial intelligence systems for self-driving vehicles raised the funding from SoftBank, Nvidia, Microsoft and others.
By Adam Satariano
ABC, NBC, CBS and CNN all face questions about their future, just as one of the toughest journalistic assignments looms.
By John Koblin
The agency said Boeing had disclosed last month that it might have skipped some required inspections of the wide-body jet.
By Mark Walker and Niraj Chokshi
The social safety net programs continue to face long-term shortfalls as lawmakers wrestle over changes.
By Alan Rappeport and Margot Sanger-Katz
Here is the full list of winners and finalists.
By The New York Times
The prize for public service went to ProPublica for coverage of the Supreme Court. The Pulitzer board also issued a special citation for journalists covering the Middle East.
By Michael M. Grynbaum
We want to help you get your money in shape.
By Mike Dang
We want to hear from lawyers using generative A.I. to better understand how firms incorporate or train the technology.
By Noam Scheiber
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TotalEnergies and Shell are contemplating the advantages of listing shares in the United States to strengthen what they say are low market valuations.
By Stanley Reed
People with two copies of the gene variant APOE4 are almost certain to get Alzheimer’s, say researchers, who proposed a framework under which such patients could be diagnosed years before symptoms.
By Pam Belluck
The shipping company said the militia had recently tried to attack ships farther from the shore of Yemen, putting more strain on logistics.
By Peter Eavis
Tech giants are building power-hungry data centers to run their artificial intelligence tools. The costs of that demand surge are becoming clearer.
By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Ravi Mattu, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch and Ephrat Livni
The market for shares of hot start-ups like SpaceX and Stripe is projected to reach a record $64 billion this year.
By Erin Griffith
Qantas, Australia’s national carrier, apologized and said it would pay a fine and compensation to settle a suit brought by a consumer watchdog.
By Jin Yu Young
Women in Shanghai gather in bars, salons and bookstores to reclaim their identities as the country’s leader calls for China to adopt a “childbearing culture.”
By Alexandra Stevenson
The first Black woman to run a broadcast news division, Ms. Godwin had a rocky tenure defined by infighting and damaging leaks.
By Benjamin Mullin and John Koblin
While enough for No. 1, the big-budget original movie gave Hollywood its lowest start to its summer box office season since 1995.
By Brooks Barnes
After letting exclusive talks with the movie studio Skydance lapse, Paramount’s directors met over the weekend and decided to negotiate with all the suitors.
By Benjamin Mullin and Lauren Hirsch
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The global price of gold has reached its highest levels as Chinese investors and consumers, wary of real estate and stocks, buy the metal at a record pace.
By Daisuke Wakabayashi and Claire Fu
In a suit filed in federal court in New York, a firm that provided hundreds of millions of dollars to 777 accused the company of double-pledging its collateral to other investors.
By Tariq Panja
The company also disclosed in its first-quarter earnings that it had trimmed its stake in Apple, but Warren Buffett, its C.E.O., said he remained a fan of Apple.
By Michael J. de la Merced
The exclusive period for Paramount’s potential merger with Skydance expired without a deal, highlighting the long-debated question of whether exclusivity is a waste of time.
By Lauren Hirsch, Michael J. de la Merced and Ravi Mattu
The automaker led by Elon Musk is no longer planning to take the lead in expanding the number of places to fuel electric vehicles. It’s not clear how quickly other companies will fill the gap.
By Jack Ewing and Ivan Penn
Thieves are using skimmers to drain millions in food stamps and other public benefits from the neediest Americans.
By Jessica Fu
Companies like Lego and Mattel have divisions that seek out design concepts directly from collectors and other highly dedicated fan bases.
By Isaac Aronow
American investors are gobbling up the storied teams of the English Premier League — and changing the stadium experience in ways that soccer fans resent.
By Bruce Schoenfeld
The real estate mogul Barry Sternlicht’s scathing criticism of his alma mater is the most immediate blowback against the school’s deal to end protests on campus.
By Rob Copeland
The chain, which started with a single shop in Brooklyn in 1924, said it would close all 42 of its locations by the end of July, citing competition from online retailers.
By Michael Levenson
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Negotiations are now likely to focus on another suitor, Sony, which has teamed up with the private equity giant Apollo on a $26 billion bid.
By Benjamin Mullin and Lauren Hirsch
Columbia University’s radio station and other student-led news outlets have provided some of the most detailed coverage of the turmoil engulfing university campuses.
By Santul Nerkar
A cooler-than-expected jobs report for April shifted the tone on Wall Street, rekindling investors’ expectations that the Federal Reserve may cut rates soon.
By J. Edward Moreno and Joe Rennison
As director of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, she fought for better working wages and conditions while wresting control from the mob.
By Steven Greenhouse
Backlash over the deal has echoes of the 1980s when Nippon Steel tried and failed to buy another American metal company.
By Alan Rappeport
Regulators said BF Borgers failed to abide by accounting rules that its public company clients are required to follow.
By Matthew Goldstein
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