Erich Schwartzel covers the film industry in The Wall Street Journal's Los Angeles bureau. He joined the Journal in 2013 and has written dozens of front-page stories on life and business in ...
Texas trial lawyer and internet star Jefferson Fisher on bringing back directness as workers return to the office: ‘We’re ...
Sharon Weinberger is the national security and foreign policy editor at The Wall Street Journal. Previously, she was the Washington, D.C., bureau chief for Yahoo News, and before that, the ...
Ruth Simon is a New York-based reporter for The Wall Street Journal, where she covers small business and entrepreneurship. She has previously covered consumer lending, mortgages and housing ...
Jenny Strasburg is a reporter in London, where she writes for The Wall Street Journal about oil and gas, climate, the transition to lower-carbon energy and the people, money and politics setting ...
Amy Dockser Marcus is a health and science reporter for The Wall Street Journal based in Boston. Her stories depict how scientific advances are transforming society and raising bioethical questions.
Candace Taylor is an editor and reporter covering luxury real estate for The Wall Street Journal. Before joining the Journal, she was a reporter and editor at the Real Deal, a real-estate trade ...
Stocks on Wall Street shook off a weak start and closed slightly higher Friday, snapping a four-week losing streak. The S&P 500 edged up 0.1%. The index finished with a 0.5% gain for the week.
Arian Campo-Flores is an economics reporter for The Wall Street Journal, based in Miami. He mainly covers Florida and the Southeast but also does stories in other parts of the U.S. He regularly ...
A Wall Street banker lost out on a job from a top insurer after he was slapped with criminal charges that he raped a 25-year-old woman in New York City last month, The Post has learned.
in a bid to expand its user base and move into other asset classes. A deal was announced Thursday morning, confirming an earlier report from The Wall Street Journal.
That was far better than expectations. Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had estimated a monthly decrease of 3.2%.