David Gura
Stories
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Business
College endowments are experiencing some whiplash
After setting records in 2021, endowment returns have fallen dramatically amid economic uncertainty. Some colleges and universities have endowments that rival the economies of entire countries.
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Arts & Life
SEC charges Kim Kardashian for unlawfully touting crypto on her Instagram account
The reality TV star hawked a crypto token on her Instagram account without telling her hundreds of millions of followers she'd been paid to do so.
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Business
The dollar is surging. This is who gets helped - and hurt - by its newfound strength
The U.S. dollar is the strongest it has been in 20 years. As it strengthens, other currencies — like the pound — weaken. That's good news for U.S. consumers and importers but bad news for others.
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Technology
The White House calls for more regulations as cryptocurrencies grow more popular
The Biden administration is calling for more oversight as the adoption of cryptocurrencies grows, saying they pose significant risks.
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Business
Stocks plummet. Dow drops nearly 1,300 points after worrying inflation data
All three indexes fell after worse-than-expected inflation data raised expectations the Fed will need to continue raising interest rates aggressively to bring prices under control.
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Technology
Trump's social media company dealt another setback in road to stock market listing
The Trump social media company, of which Truth Social is a part of, is hoping to raise more money by merging with a blank check company, but it's faced delays, and legal and regulatory scrutiny.
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World
Deadly fighting in Libya's capital sparks fears of wider conflict
An update on the recent deadly clashes in Libya between militias backed by rival administrations.
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Business
3 warning signs about the economy coming out of America's top companies
Companies are bracing for potential trouble ahead by lowering their advertising budgets, cutting costs and adapting to their customers' changing spending habits.
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National
NYC companies hesitate on in-person work because of attacks on public transit
On Wall Street, executives who want workers to return to the office are having to deal with employees who are reluctant because they're worried about crime, and thinking the city is less safe.
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Business
Trading app Robinhood cuts nearly a quarter of its staff
Robinhood, which became wildly popular during the pandemic, is reeling. After a decline in earnings, the company announced a second round of layoffs.