Apple will spend $400 million through 2030 on new programs with Bosch, Cirrus Logic, TDK, and Qnity Electronics to manufacture essential materials and components in the U.S. The expansion builds on ...
Apple will begin producing Mac minis in Houston later this year for the first time, expanding its U.S. manufacturing footprint and creating what the company said will be "thousands of jobs." The ...
This shortened President’s Day week is still a big one for economic data. Gross domestic product figures come out Friday, along with some reports covering home construction, home sales, consumer ...
I would say the Trump tariffs are not helping. I mean, mostly because there's no larger coherent plan attached to them. Like they're very chaotic in terms of like what country faces what raid and ...
Spending to build, expand and rehabilitate manufacturing sites in the U.S. has declined since President Donald Trump took office, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. Yet, Trump has repeatedly ...
After tariffs rose to the highest levels in centuries, the U.S. lost tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs last year. In December, WSJ’s Gavin Bade went inside Detroit to learn why—and meet the ...
For the better part of the last decade, conversations about U.S. manufacturing have focused on a single question: How many jobs are we adding or losing? That question misses the point. As we head into ...
US manufacturing activity unexpectedly expanded in January at the fastest pace since 2022, energized by solid growth in new orders and production. The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing ...
Inside T1 Energy's state-of-the-art G1_Dallas facility in Wilmer, employees are dressed in gray and yellow vests, stationed at different points along seven parallel half-mile-long manufacturing lines.
My great-grandfather, Fred Stoelting was a blacksmith from southern Indiana who came of age in the late 19th Century. During his career, the invention of rubber threatened to disrupt the blacksmithing ...
Introducing the highest U.S. tariffs since the Great Depression, President Donald Trump made a clear promise in the spring: “Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country.” They haven’t.
Factory activity returned to expansion after nine months of contraction. Manufacturing outperformed forecasts, signaling stabilizing demand. Large firms drove gains, while smaller businesses stayed ...