Supreme Court leaves Trump-era offshore tax in place on investors The case had potentially trillions of dollars in tax consequences for the federal budget, and the court's decision could have severely limited congressional options in enacting tax policy. Nina Totenberg
U.S. home prices have far outpaced paychecks. See what it looks like where you live In nearly half of metro areas, buyers must make more than $100,000 to afford a median-priced home, a Harvard University report finds. And home prices this year reached a new all-time high. Daniel Wood
A supermarket trip may soon look different, thanks to electronic shelf labels With electronic shelf labels, prices can change up to six times a minute. Grocers including Walmart, Whole Foods and Schnucks are adopting them. Lola Murti
Ralph Lauren unveils Team USA's Olympic and Paralympic uniforms The opening ceremony outfits feature jeans paired with a navy blue blazer trimmed in white and red. The closing ceremony features a white moto-style jacket accompanied with white jeans. Ayana Archie
Will tariffs keep Chinese EVs out of the U.S. market? The United States and Europe are hiking tariffs on Chinese-made electric cars. Will that protect American jobs and auto manufacturers from an influx of lower-priced Chinese cars?
Amazon's struggling union joins forces with the Teamsters For two years, Amazon has refused to recognize its single unionized warehouse, organized by the upstart Amazon Labor Union. Now the hefty Teamsters is lending its muscle to the union effort. Alina Selyukh
If AI is so good, why are there still so many jobs for translators? Machine translation of foreign languages has been good for a while. And yet human translators are still in demand. Why isn’t AI killing these jobs? And even if it isn’t, how is it reshaping them? Greg Rosalsky
A year after the Titan submersible implosion, investigators still don't have answers OceanGate's Titan submersible imploded on its way to the Titanic wreck one year ago. The Coast Guard initially had 12 months to complete its investigation, but says it needs more time. Rachel Treisman
Apple just made your app obsolete? You've been 'Sherlocked' The controversial practice dates back to the 1990s when Apple introduced a service called Watson that critics say ripped off another company’s tool. Since then, small apps have said it has become a pattern. Bobby Allyn