buyer’s market
Mar. 4, 2020
How Airlines Are Reacting to Coronavirus: Fewer Flights, More Flexible Terms Airlines are cutting down on the frequency of service on some major business routes, while easing off rebooking fees to attract flexible customers.
Economists Argue Over Whether Coronavirus Calls for a Fiscal Stimulus The answer largely depends on how long one expects the virus to disrupt supply chains.
the top line
Mar. 2, 2020
Trump Is Right to Want Fed to Fight Coronavirus. But They Can’t Do That Much A rate cut right now would be a good idea, which is why the markets expect one. But Trump has more important tools to work with.
the top line
Feb. 27, 2020
buyer’s market
Feb. 26, 2020
the top line
Feb. 24, 2020
Which Stocks Are Rising on Coronavirus Fears? The companies that bucked Monday’s 1,000-point Dow drop paint a bleak picture of what a coronavirus pandemic could mean for the global economy.
the top line
Feb. 24, 2020
The Stock Market Is Plunging Because of Bigger Coronavirus Fears The market is starting to price in two big concerns: supply-chain disruption and the chance of a global pandemic.
the top line
Feb. 20, 2020
What Morgan Stanley Is Getting by Buying E-Trade The lesson here for retail-brokerage clients is to figure out whether they are keeping too much money in cash.
buyer’s market
Feb. 19, 2020
Skiing Is More Expensive Than Ever, and Also Cheaper – If You Plan Right As the ski industry has become more consolidated and more corporate, it has copied pricing strategies from the airline and hotel industries.
intelligencer chats
Feb. 18, 2020
Are Markets Underrating the Coronavirus Threat? The outbreak has all but ground China to a halt, but so far the Western financial world isn’t panicking.
Tall Delta CEO Asks Passengers to Please Think of the Tall Before Reclining There’s a button to recline your seat because that’s a thing you’re allowed to do; there’s no button to shake the seat in front of you.
the top line
Feb. 14, 2020
Why Elon Musk Is Raising Billions in Cash for Tesla If Musk’s instinct in 2018 was to buy shares when the price was low, it makes sense that Tesla is now selling stock when the price is high.
buyer’s market
Feb. 12, 2020
It’s Time to Get Rid of NYC’s Rental Broker Fees for Good New York City is expensive enough, and there are better ways to compensate real-estate agents.
the top line
Feb. 7, 2020
Tesla Stock Is Way Up and Nobody Really Knows Why The price chart for Tesla shares has lately looked like a hockey stick. Are Elon Musk fans driving the action or is something else going on?
the top line
Feb. 6, 2020
Paul Singer Wants to Save SoftBank From Itself How does one keep Masayoshi Son from squandering more of his billions on projects like WeWork?
buyer’s market
Feb. 5, 2020
How I Learned to Let Go of My Baggage — Literally There are actually a lot of advantages to checking your luggage. And airlines have done their share to make it a better choice.
The Markets Don’t Know What to Make of Coronavirus Yet The volatility in the markets reflects uncertainty about how widespread the coronavirus outbreak will be, and how long it will last.
the top line
Jan. 31, 2020
Here’s Why Wuhan Coronavirus Has U.S. Airlines Leaving China For a variety of political and practical reasons, all three of the major global U.S. airlines are suspending their flights to mainland China.
the top line
Jan. 30, 2020
Why a Le Creuset Dutch Oven Is Worth Every Penny I love my Le Creuset pots and pans, and I guess I was an early adopter, since I bought my first one before Instagram existed.
buyer’s market
Jan. 29, 2020
Here Are Two Things Apple Is Doing Right The stock has been going up — and the company’s latest report shows why investors were correct to be optimistic.
the top line
Jan. 27, 2020
Why the Stock Market Is So Worried About Coronavirus History suggests that outbreaks like the one in China can have negative effects that go well beyond their death tolls.
the top line
Jan. 24, 2020
Fixing the MTA Bureaucracy Has to Start at the Top: With Andrew Cuomo The mourning over Andy Byford’s departure highlights the agency’s dysfunction: New Yorkers want a savior rather than just a competent manager.
the top line
Jan. 23, 2020
Why Away Has Named Two CEOs — and Why It Won’t Work The luggage-maker wants to project that founder Steph Korey is in charge — but also that she is not in charge. It’s not a recipe for success.
Netflix Beat Wall Street Forecasts. So Why Did Its Stock Fall? Intensifying competition in the U.S. and questions about cash flow raise existential questions for the streaming giant.
new york times
Jan. 21, 2020
Should Newspaper Endorsements Exist? In the wake of the Times ’ big reveal of its choice, Intelligencer staffers discuss whether this tradition makes any sense.
Does Trump’s New Trade Deal Really Accomplish Anything? Intelligencer staffers chat about the significance of the preliminary agreement between the United States and China.
buyer’s market
Jan. 15, 2020
When Buying in Bulk Is a Mistake Sometimes stocking up can be a great investment — and sometimes a waste of money.
the top line
Jan. 14, 2020
Wage Growth Is Unequal in This Economy — But Not in the Way We’ve Come to Expect Workers at the bottom end of the scale have been doing best for a change. What’s driving it?
the top line
Jan. 13, 2020
Trump Admits China Isn’t a Currency Manipulator The essentially symbolic nature of this action fits with the essentially symbolic nature of the Phase One trade deal as a whole.
the top line
Jan. 13, 2020
Casper Will Go Public, Offering the Latest New and Exciting Way to Lose Money Don’t call Casper a mattress company. Casper, which filed paperwork to go public on Friday, says it is “a pioneer of the Sleep Economy.”
the top line
Jan. 10, 2020
Sad CEO Wants Tariffs That Hurt Other Businesses, Not His Own He has his reasons for making the argument he does. But the wider context is important: Overall, tariffs create more losers than winners.
buyer’s market
Jan. 8, 2020
The Secret to a Relaxing Vacation: Meticulous, Detailed Plans When it comes to travel, “going with the flow” is wildly overrated.
Cuomo’s Penn Station Plan Is a Beautiful Boondoggle He could save billions and improve New York’s rail service by finding a way to end the turf wars among the region’s transit agencies.
the top line
Jan. 6, 2020
How Would War With Iran Affect the U.S. Economy? Oil-supply shocks are still harmful. But they’re not as harmful as they used to be, and that has major foreign-policy implications.
the top line
Jan. 4, 2020
Maybe They Were Out to Get Carlos Ghosn. That Doesn’t Mean He Isn’t a Criminal. The former Nissan and Renault executive believes that Japan’s stated reasons for pursuing him are just a pretext. He could be right.
the top line
Dec. 30, 2019
3 Big Economic Trends of the 2010s Slow, steady, and perhaps more sustainable growth defined the decade.
the top line
Dec. 20, 2019
Here’s How Democrats Can Talk About the Economy Most Americans are very positive on it right now. So how does a candidate convince voters not to reelect Trump?
the top line
Dec. 19, 2019
The House Impeached Trump, and the Stock Market Did Not Crash. Sad! Despite Trump repeatedly warning that impeaching him would lead to a stock-market tumble.
buyer’s market
Dec. 18, 2019
Why Paying More for Fitness Is Part of Peloton’s Proposition A $2,000 exercise bike you’ll keep using is a better value than a $200 one that you’ll use five times before turning it into a clothing rack
Will the Trade War With China Be Permanent? Intelligencer staffers discuss the future economic relationship between the two global superpowers.
the top line
Dec. 13, 2019
A Partial Trade Deal With China Mitigates One More Trump-Economy Risk The most important thing about the “phase one” trade agreement announced Friday by U.S. and Chinese officials is what won’t happen.
the top line
Dec. 13, 2019
The Lessons of Away’s Weird Company Culture A hardass CEO isn’t necessarily a problem. But don’t let things get out of hand.
the top line
Dec. 11, 2019
If Trump Is Reelected, He Will Come for Your Amazon Prime The president’s other major initiative to punish Amazon and Bezos may have significant, direct impacts on consumers.
paul volcker
Dec. 11, 2019
Paul Volcker Was Right About Inflation Imitators may have overlearned his lessons, but the former Fed chair took necessary steps to right the economy.
the top line
Dec. 9, 2019
No, New York Is Not Getting an Amazon Headquarters Anyway There have been an awful lot of unwarranted victory laps in the last few days by opponents of the original deal.
President Trump Is Wrong — Toilets Are Good Now “People are flushing toilets ten times, 15 times, as opposed to once,” the president said. But low-flow toilets have come a long way.
intelligencer chats
Dec. 6, 2019
What Does Today’s Positive Jobs Report Mean for Trump’s Reelection? Intelligencer staffers discuss the political implications of the humming economy, and why wage growth isn’t keeping up with the broader picture.
buyer’s market
Dec. 4, 2019
It’s Not Your Imagination — This Holiday Season Is Unusually Rushed This Christmas is coming just 27 days after Thanksgiving, which is the shortest gap possible. That has both personal and commercial implications.
What Happened to Recession Fears? Let’s take a look at what we were worried about a year ago and why we’re less worried about it now.
buyer’s market
Nov. 27, 2019
Black Friday Isn’t Just a Day. It’s a State of Mind. Black Friday is increasingly just an umbrella term for any kind of shopping in late autumn that entails some semblance of getting a deal.
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