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A worse-than-expected December jobs report last week couldn't derail the economic optimism that's been fueling stock gains for months. But the weeks ahead could prove challenging, as the quarterly reporting period gets underway.
Your cable bill is going up this year -- and next year, and the year after that -- with no end in sight.
As lawmakers start trickling back to Washington next week, a panel tasked with investigating the financial crisis is set to make its first big splash.
From 3-D TV to mobile video conferencing and tricked out e-Readers, the latest in tech is being unveiled this week at the Consumer Electronics Show. Here's what's hot.
Buy your Super Bowl ads while you still can, because spots are filling fast.
Here's an early peek at what automakers will be unveiling next week at the nation's biggest car show.
A tech rally propelled the Nasdaq and helped the broader market erase losses Friday, as investors took in stride a surprisingly weak jobs report amid other recent signs that the economy appears to be stabilizing.
Ford's new MyTouch software makes cars act like smartphones.
President Obama unveiled a program Friday that will provide $2.3 billion in tax credits for the clean energy manufacturing sector, a move aimed at creating 17,000 jobs.
If you're a struggling carmaker looking to make a splash and create controversy, unveiling a new vehicle called "the Detonator" at the Detroit Auto Show may sound like a good idea. If you do it two weeks after an attempted terror attack aimed at the very city where you're doing the unveiling, you may think twice.
Money is overrated: In fact, pay has little, if anything at all, to do with motivation in the workplace. That's the controversial argument put forth by best-selling author Daniel Pink in his new book, Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us (Riverhead Books). "Pay for performance has to be exposed as folklore," he says.
UPS announced plans to cut 1,800 jobs as part of a restructuring plan intended to streamline the company's domestic management structure.
Ronald Perelman may not be the most disputatious tycoon on the planet, but he sure spends a lot of time in the courtroom. Something about the bullet-headed billionaire engenders conflict. The list of formerly close associates and relations with whom Perelman has engaged in knockdown, drag-out legal battles includes a former chief financial officer of his company, a former vice chairman, and all four ex-wives. Perelman, evidently, has issues with exes.
Employers once again slashed a substantial number jobs off their payrolls in December, according to the latest labor report from the government Friday. But there was a small glimmer of hope in the report.
Here's an early peek at what automakers will be unveiling next week at the nation's biggest car show.
In the season of returns and exchanges, there's one holiday gift that Steve Brannigan will be holding on to: his new job. What began as a temporary survival strategy has turned into a 40-hour work week for the former auto worker.