As downtown and coastal rents soar past $3,000 per month, savvy investors and developers are capitalizing on emerging pockets of affordability in San Pedro, Boyle Heights, and the Arts District.
As virtual restaurants and delivery-first models dominate, traditional hospitality venues are losing workers to more flexible, tech-driven roles that pay better and demand less.
As tech corridors expand from Santa Monica to Downtown, the startup boom is forcing established employers to compete harder for workers—and fundamentally reshaping how Angelenos think about their careers.
Rising labor costs and consumer spending patterns are redirecting capital flows across Downtown, West Hollywood, and Santa Monica's dining and lodging landscapes.
As geopolitical tensions ease, logistics firms and manufacturers in the Port of LA corridor are positioning themselves to capture billions in newly accessible markets.
As supply chain costs squeeze small vendors across Los Angeles, everyday consumers face hard truths about the economics keeping neighborhood businesses alive.
Geopolitical instability is forcing local businesses to rethink supply chains, hiring strategies, and investment priorities in ways that will reshape employment across the region.
As commercial real estate transforms across Los Angeles, everyday residents face higher costs for apartments and services—here's why the downtown skyline matters to your wallet.
Real estate investors and tech entrepreneurs are racing to capture gains as the Bunker Hill and Arts District corridor transforms into a magnet for life sciences startups.
As renewable energy and climate tech companies cluster in Playa Vista and downtown LA, skilled workers and established firms are seeing unprecedented opportunity.
As companies downsize their real estate footprint, entrepreneurs are seizing opportunities to convert underused commercial spaces across Los Angeles into gyms, mental health clinics, and wellness centers—and the first wave of operators are seeing double-digit revenue growth.
Declining occupancy rates and shifting investment patterns across Downtown and Westside corridors reveal where institutional money is flowing—and why some sectors are being left behind.
As international supply chains reconfigure and emerging markets demand new skills, Los Angeles employers are scrambling to hire multilingual professionals and specialists in emerging markets.
As visitor numbers surge post-pandemic, hospitality and service sector wages are rising across Los Angeles, forcing employers to compete harder for workers.