With geopolitical tensions and shifting investment patterns making headlines worldwide, local business leaders explain what economic indicators really mean for Los Angeles companies and jobs.
As vacancy rates climb and rents fall across Downtown and West LA, commercial real estate data reveals shifting investment patterns that could reshape the city's economy.
As single-family homes near Silver Lake and Los Feliz breach $2 million, a new class of developers and investors is profiting from the city's pivot toward mixed-use density.
With venture funding reaching new milestones across Downtown and Santa Monica, economists break down what the numbers mean for Los Angeles startups and the broader regional economy.
Rising labor costs, shifting consumer habits, and supply chain volatility are reshaping the economics of restaurants and shops across Los Angeles in 2026.
As companies embrace hybrid models, LA's talent landscape is fragmenting—with winners in Downtown and Santa Monica losing ground to emerging hubs in the San Fernando Valley.
Hotel occupancy rates and dining revenues surge across the city, with West Hollywood and Downtown emerging as the biggest beneficiaries of pent-up international travel demand.
As demand for disability-friendly clothing surges, savvy business owners across Los Angeles are capturing a market that major retailers have largely ignored.
As capital flows shift and inflation pressures ease, local investors and business leaders decode what the data really means for neighborhoods from Downtown to Santa Monica.
As virtual restaurants and compact food concepts proliferate across the city, traditional hospitality roles are being reimagined—and thousands of workers are discovering new career paths in the process.
As tensions from the Middle East to Africa disrupt supply chains and talent flows, Los Angeles founders are rethinking everything from hiring to funding.
A Silver Lake-based staffing startup is reshaping how businesses fill skilled positions across Los Angeles, creating hundreds of new jobs in the process.
Downtown Los Angeles office vacancy climbs as hybrid work reshapes the commercial real estate landscape. How companies are relocating and what workers need to know.
As venture capital floods into Los Angeles neighborhoods from Silver Lake to Santa Monica, entrepreneurs and investors are learning to decode the signals that separate sustainable growth from speculative bubbles.