As venture capital floods into artificial intelligence infrastructure, a cluster of founders and established tech players in Williamsburg and DUMBO are positioning themselves to capture a disproportionate share of the boom.
As same-day delivery becomes table stakes for retailers, a new class of warehouse operators in Williamsburg and Red Hook are capturing margin-rich contracts worth millions.
After years of runaway rents, savvy investors and first-time homebuyers are capitalizing on a rare window of opportunity across the city's outer boroughs.
Record hotel occupancy rates and corporate travel spending signal a robust rebound, but shifting investment patterns reveal where New York's hospitality sector is heading next.
As global tensions mount and protectionist policies tighten, the executives and traders who power Manhattan's financial district are bracing for their most volatile year in a decade.
As tech startups flood Williamsburg and DUMBO, wages are climbing for engineers but affordable housing and mid-skill jobs are disappearing faster than ever.
As rent and operating costs climb across the city, local entrepreneurs are making hard choices that directly affect where you shop, eat, and do business.
As tourism indicators soften, investors are redirecting capital away from traditional hospitality and toward experience-driven attractions—reshaping how New York generates revenue from its 60-plus million annual visitors.
As investment firms struggle with elevated operational expenses and an exodus of top earners to tech hubs, the city's financial epicenter faces its toughest year since the pandemic.
Supply chain disruptions, currency fluctuations, and geopolitical tensions are forcing Manhattan and Brooklyn establishments to rethink sourcing, staffing, and pricing strategies.
Persistent remote work patterns, rising interest rates, and delayed return-to-office mandates are creating a perfect storm for commercial real estate across Manhattan's prime corridors.
As startup clusters reshape neighborhoods from Williamsburg to Hudson Yards, ordinary residents face both opportunity and displacement—here's what you need to know.
As geopolitical shifts reshape global commerce, New York entrepreneurs and established firms are positioning themselves to capture unprecedented opportunities in emerging African markets.
Sarah Chen's supply-chain decarbonization platform is reshaping how Fortune 500 companies track emissions—and attracting serious venture capital to New York's innovation corridor.