'Selling Sunset' broker says Compass faces a 'grim reality': Dan Latu
Oppenheim called the amount Compass brokers get to keep from commissions "unsustainable," but Compass said it has no plans to change its "split policy."
NASA vs. China: Photos reveal the state of their race to the moon: Morgan McFall-Johnsen
NASA and China each just launched landmark missions in their efforts to put astronauts back on the moon. The spaceflights are very different.
Unclear when inflation will subside, interest rates will remain high: Powell: Ayelet Sheffey
"It will take substantially more evidence" for the Fed to be sure inflation is declining, Powell said. But it's still possible to avoid a recession.
TikTokers are destroying Balenciaga products to protest the brand: Charissa Cheong
On November 22, Balenciaga removed controversial ads after they were accused of sexualizing children. Now TikTokers are publicly boycotting the brand.
Jack Ma: Timeline of rise and fall with China government, now in Japan: Sinéad Baker
Ma, who founded Alibaba and Ant Group, clashed with Chinese regulators after he criticized China's financial regulatory system.
Strong economy now will lead to stock market crash, recession, higher inflation in 2023: Neil Dutta
A suddenly surging economy will force the Federal Reserve to keep hiking interest rates. When that happens, investors and consumers better buckle up.
Secret 9/11 memo reveals Bush rewriting the history of the terror attacks: Mattathias Schwartz
George W. Bush's answers in a newly declassified 9/11 Commission interview helped him escape blame and win re-election. But they don't add up.
Buying a home in 2023 will still suck: Alcynna Lloyd
Higher mortgage rates mean pricier monthly payments for homebuyers, which offset any affordability gained from declining property prices.
The colossal failure of Amazon's Alexa business model: Jake Swearingen
Voice assistants like Alexa were supposed to revolutionize computers — but nobody can figure out how to make money off of them.
Elon Musk keeps firing Twitter workers by mistake, affecting HR system: Kali Hays
Layoffs, resignations, and a string of firings under new Twitter CEO Elon Musk have seen the company's headcount cut by 70%.