Business
/ArcaMax
Auto review: 2024 Acura TLX Type-S is the perfect sedan
As the sedans continue to be a backburner choice for American car consumers, Acura pushes forward and does the unthinkable: manufacturing a sporty sedan with all-wheel drive, power and luxury. The 2024 Acura TLX Type-S is exactly what consumers in many categories are looking for.
With Acura’s long lasting history of great value, excellent ...Read more
Auto review: 2025 Lamborghini Urus SE Plug-In Hybrid is still a righteous raging bull
NARDÒ, Italy — Don’t look now, but Lamborghini builds nothing but gas-electric hybrids.
As Lamborghini develops its first battery-electric supercar, due in 2028, it’s also busy fielding gas-electric hybrid powertrains in the interim. It started with the Aventador’s replacement, the Revuelto. With 1,001 horsepower flowing from its 6.5-...Read more
How Trump could put his campaign promises on tariffs into action
President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to impose massive new tariffs upon entering office on Jan. 20, calling them “the greatest thing ever invented.” And unlike some of his other campaign promises, he’s been consistent, repeatedly suggesting he’ll impose a 10% to 20% tariff on all foreign goods and a tariff of 60% or higher on products ...Read more
GM ending Cadillac XT4 production in January
General Motors Co. is ending production of the gas-powered Cadillac XT4 small SUV in January 2025, the automaker confirmed Thursday.
The XT4 is built at GM's Fairfax Assembly plant in Kansas, where production of the Chevrolet Malibu sedan is ending this month. GM is still investing $391 million in Fairfax to make a new version of the Chevrolet ...Read more
After snafu, San Diego Comic-Con sets new sales date for final tickets
A date has been set for the last San Diego Comic-Con tickets.
After technical problems halted sales in late October, the pop culture juggernaut announced Thursday morning it had set a new sale date for final 2025 tickets: Saturday, Nov. 23.
The final tickets are part of what Comic-Con calls its open registration. It already held its returning ...Read more
EV maker Rivian falls short of revenue projections for third quarter
Electric vehicle maker Rivian missed Wall Street's expectations for revenue on Thursday, with sales coming in lower than anticipated in the third quarter.
The Irvine-based company reported revenue of $874 million in the three months ending Sept. 30., which fell short of the $992 million projected by analysts, according to FactSet. The company ...Read more
Molson Coors closing historic, beloved Leinenkugel's brewery in Chippewa Falls
The historic Leinenkugel’s brewery in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, is closing after more than 150 years of operating in the town, as parent company Molson Coors centralizes brewing operations in Milwaukee.
“While never easy, these choices are made with much thought and consideration to position Molson Coors for continued success in Wisconsin ...Read more
Trump's return could be bad for WA trade and workers, good for tech
For some Washington business leaders, Donald Trump’s return to the White House revives hopes of fresh cuts to corporate taxes and a host of regulations.
Tech company leaders hoping to gain Trump’s good graces congratulated him on his win. Wall Street analysts expressed optimism that his administration won’t put guardrails on the tech ...Read more
Fed cuts interest rates again, but Trump's victory makes future path much murkier
The Federal Reserve cut interest rates for a second straight time on Thursday in an effort to keep the economy sailing along by easing the high borrowing costs it engineered to fight inflation. But going forward Fed policymakers must contend with a big new unknown: a second Trump presidential term.
The quarter-percentage-point reduction in the ...Read more
Real estate Q&A: Who's responsible for hedge damaged by landscaper?
Q: The landscaper hired by our HOA for the community damaged a large hedge in our yard that now must be replaced. My HOA says the damage is not their responsibility and that I must resolve the problem myself. Do I have to deal directly with the landscape company? —Jo Ann
A: No, your community association will need to deal with this problem. ...Read more
How Trump's second presidency could bring more drama to Hollywood
Already facing retrenchment and existential concerns about its business model, Hollywood is bracing for more potential volatility from the incoming Trump administration.
While President-elect Donald Trump has not laid out specific plans for the entertainment industry, analysts said his proposed broader policies on global tariffs, as well as the...Read more
Las Vegas real estate market on 'wild ride' for past 5 years: Zillow
Las Vegas’ residential real estate market has been on a “wild ride” for the past five years but could finally be getting off the roller coaster ride that started during the pandemic, according to new statistical analysis from Zillow.
The Las Vegas market recently entered more “balanced territory,” said Kara Ng, a senior economist with...Read more
Other cities want less self-storage. Philadelphia can't get enough of it
PHILADELPHIA — On a windblown stretch of the Delaware riverfront in late September, an array of local leaders lined up to praise a new use for Pier 40.
After sitting derelict for years, the monumental Beaux-Arts remnant of Philadelphia’s industrial history was sold to PrimeSpace Capital, and the New York-based developer refurbished its ...Read more
General Mills' $1.2B bet on pet treats falls victim to poor timing
When General Mills paid $1.2 billion for Tyson’s pet treats business in 2021, CEO Jeff Harmening predicted a “long runway of strong, profitable growth ahead.”
Three years later, the maker of Blue Buffalo is downgrading the value of its True Chews and Top Chews brands over “lower future sales and profitability projections,” per a ...Read more
After a century, concrete plant that helped build LA makes way for a deluxe tower
If the new apartment tower had been planned for another plot of land, chances are good the concrete plant in the middle of the city would have helped build it.
But, as it happens, the century-old facility on La Brea Avenue that has provided concrete for buildings and roads across the Los Angeles region sat where the tower is to go up.
Now, the...Read more
Older home buyers, more cash, and (relatively) fewer first-timers: A national survey sheds light on the state of the housing market
Rising home prices are continuing both to benefit established homeowners and to challenge buyers trying to purchase their first home, according to the National Association of Realtors’ annual report surveying buyers and sellers.
“The U.S. housing market is split into two groups: first-time buyers struggling to enter the market and current ...Read more
More Minnesotans face 'pharmacy deserts' with chain drugstore closures
KB Brown’s phone hasn’t stopped ringing since Walgreens shut its W. Broadway store last year, leaving one pharmacy to serve 67,000 residents in the north Minneapolis area where he lives and runs his graphics design business.
With Walgreens gone — and CVS shutting four other area stores — Brown, at least three times a week, transports ...Read more
Economic opportunity or environmental burden? Massive proposed real estate project ignites debate in Chicago
A massive commercial real estate project proposed for Chicago’s Southeast Side remains in limbo as its planners battle environmental activists over how best to rebuild the area’s economy.
A group backed by the Ozinga family wants to burrow several hundred feet beneath a contaminated former steel mill site and create a 6 million-square-foot ...Read more
Elon Musk went all-in to elect Trump. What a second Trump presidency could mean for big tech
SAN FRANCISCO — On election night, as Republican Donald Trump inched closer to reclaiming the U.S. presidency, some tech executives and venture capitalists rejoiced.
“The people of America gave@realDonaldTrump a crystal clear mandate for change tonight,” Elon Musk posted on his social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.
The ...Read more
Stellantis will cut 1,100 jobs at Toledo's Jeep Gladiator plant
Stellantis NV said Wednesday it plans to cut a shift at its Toledo plant that builds Jeep Gladiator pickups, which will result in about 1,100 indefinite layoffs by early next year.
The move from two to one shifts does not come as a surprise, with Gladiator sales slowing this year and the automaker seeking to slash pent-up inventories of the ...Read more
Popular Stories
- Motormouth: When should I get an oil change?
- How Trump's second presidency could bring more drama to Hollywood
- Molson Coors closing historic, beloved Leinenkugel's brewery in Chippewa Falls
- Fed cuts interest rates again, but Trump's victory makes future path much murkier
- Real estate Q&A: Who's responsible for hedge damaged by landscaper?