A slowdown in venture capital deployment across Silicon Beach masks a deeper shift toward profitable, sustainable ventures—and that's actually good news for Los Angeles.
As multinational corporations recalibrate their international operations, Los Angeles employers are competing fiercely for workers with skills in supply chain management, data analytics, and cross-border compliance.
As rents surge past $2,800 and middle-income earners flee, a new class of real estate investors and financial advisors are capitalizing on LA's affordability collapse.
As traditional corporate tenants downsize, a new wave of operators is transforming underused downtown and Westside buildings into profitable hybrid workspaces.
From supply chain disruptions to changing consumer behavior, entrepreneurs across Los Angeles are navigating a complex economic landscape that demands strategic adaptation.
Conflicting trends in downtown and coastal markets reveal how inflation, remote work, and institutional capital are reshaping where companies—and money—actually want to be.
Economic indicators show a sharp recovery in tourism investment, but the story of where dollars land reveals deeper shifts in how the city profits from visitors.
Port congestion, tariff uncertainty, and regional instability are testing the resilience of Southern California's $2.3 trillion global commerce engine.
As hospitality wages climb and supply chains stabilize unevenly, everyday Angelenos are facing higher tabs at restaurants and retail stores across the city.
From Westwood office towers to Santa Monica logistics hubs, local companies are recalculating costs and strategies as geopolitical tensions ripple through their bottom lines.
Maria Chen's workforce solutions company is reshaping how Southern California businesses fill skilled positions—and proving that homegrown talent can compete on a national stage.
As mid-year arrives, employers across Los Angeles face a tightening labor market, rising wage pressures, and a workforce increasingly demanding flexibility—forcing a strategic reset for hiring and retention.
As tech hubs cluster around Downtown, Santa Monica, and Culver City, employers are competing harder for talent while junior workers see new pathways into six-figure roles.
From retail rents on Melrose to manufacturing costs in Vernon, Los Angeles companies face mounting pressure as global instability ripples through supply chains and investment markets.
Hotel occupancy rates, convention bookings, and venture capital flooding into hospitality tech paint a picture of a visitor economy in robust recovery mode.