Mar. 25As a credit ratings agency warns of increasing retail loan defaults and accompanying unease in the sector, Connecticut shopping centers could face a changing landscape for tenant prospects to fill larger stores that have been vacated in the past few years.
Mar. 14The failure of two banks in recent days have left depositors to wonder about the stability of the industry, while experts say federal officials are taking the necessary steps to protect what is currently a tech sector problem from becoming one that hurts the averaging consumer banking customer.
Mar. 9Disagreements on how to gird the Texas power grid against widespread blackouts from intense weather events such as the 2021 winter freeze were on full display at CERAWeek by S&P Global (SPGI), the major energy conference happening in downtown Houston this week.
Mar. 3Once an energy conference focused almost exclusively on oil and gas, CERAWeek by S&P Global (SPGI) is rapidly expanding to embrace topics growing more crucial to the energy conversation: hydrogen, LNG and minerals.
Mar. 3Facing new regulations on everything from methane emissions from the Environmental Protection Agency to financial disclosure on environmental risks from the Securities and Exchange Commission, the energy industry is working to stay ahead of regulations.
Mar. 1Richard Brantley, senior vice president, operations with University Lands and this year's chairman of the Permian Basin Water in Energy Conference advisory board, looked out into the Horseshoe and didn't see hundreds of attendees. Instead, he saw a team a team working across industry and company lines to address the growing challenges of produced water.
In case all those construction cranes in the skyline arent enough of an indication, a new study shows Texas leads the country in commercial real estate activity. With more than $70 billion in direct spending in the state in 2022, Texas accounted for almost 20% of nationwide commercial real estate sector contributions to the economy.
When Michael Moiseyev left New York City a few months ago to run Baltimores finance department, he became intimately aware of a major pain point in the citys real estate market delays with lien sheets. Those documents, sometimes called lien certificates or lien certs, show whether a property owner owes money to the city.
Feb. Stamford-based consulting and research firm Gartner (IT) has nearly 1,300 employees based in Connecticut. "Gartner (IT) is an important employer in Connecticut, and we value the economic contributions they are making here," Jim Watson, a spokesman for the state Department of Economic and Community Development, said in a written statement.
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