Trump's SEC entices corporate America to defy shareholders
SEC Chair Paul Atkins said the agency will “not respond to… and express no views on” companies’ decisions to exclude shareholder proposals from corporate ballots.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins said the agency will “not respond to… and express no views on” companies’ decisions to exclude shareholder proposals from corporate ballots.
The former FTC commissioner's role in NYC Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s affordability efforts is part of a new romance with price controls.
The government will release September’s jobs report on Thursday, ending a nearly seven-week data void that confounded policymakers.
Strategic moves by UBS and Deutsche Bank signal a make-or-break moment for Europe’s long-troubled banking sector
Big Tech giants have embraced borrowing to fund their ambitious AI buildouts.
The kingdom’s crown prince arrives in Washington in search of deals, to meet with a president who wants the same. Where does the money come from?
In early 2003, readers of the New York Times were treated to a column by resident foreign affairs expert Thomas L. Friedman, in which Friedman claimed that invading Iraq and overthrowing its government would be a useful, moral, and sensible thing to do:
Speaking at a Semafor event, Rep. Becca Balint declined to rule out another government shutdown in January.