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WSJ What’s News

What's News brings you the biggest news of the day, from business and finance to global and politica

Episodes

Total: 223

A.M. Edition for Oct. 21. The WSJ’s Niharika Mandhana says the U.S. is racing to upgrade far-flung a

There are nearly a quarter million students in the University of North Carolina system, and its flag

How did rivals help United take off? And what has investors worried about the health of CVS? Plus, w

P.M. Edition for Oct. 18. WSJ reporter Alexander Osipovich discusses a wave of pro-Trump bets in one

A.M. Edition for Oct. 18. President Biden and European leaders call for negotiations to end the Isra

P.M. Edition for Oct. 17. WSJ reporter Rory Jones discusses how the death of Hamas’s leader Yayha Si

A.M. Edition for Oct. 17. WSJ correspondent Lingling Wei explains what convinced China’s leader to e

P.M. Edition for Oct. 16. The Journal’s Doug Belkin discusses why private equity is investing in col

A.M. Edition for Oct. 16. WSJ correspondent Sune Rasmussen explains how Tehran is exporting its mode

P.M. Edition for Oct. 15. WSJ reporter Aaron Zitner discusses how Donald Trump aims to win women vot

A.M. Edition for Oct. 15. The Biden administration receives assurances that Israel won’t target Iran

P.M. Edition for Oct. 14. WSJ immigration reporter Michelle Hackman on Kamala Harris’s role in Presi

A.M. Edition for Oct. 14. A sharp drop in venture-capital funding is leading the Chinese government

This spring the U.S. fertility rate dropped to another historic low. And a potential American baby b

What turned Monday into a super day for Super Micro? And what did the CrowdStrike meltdown cost Delt

P.M. Edition for Oct. 11. WSJ reporter Sarah Nassauer explains why retailers like IKEA and Nike are

A.M. Edition for Oct. 11. Voters in the nation’s seven battleground states see Donald Trump as bette

P.M. Edition for Oct. 10. WSJ real estate reporter Kate King talks about reinventing grocery deliver

A.M. Edition for Oct. 10. Millions are left without power after Hurricane Milton makes landfall as a

P.M. Edition for Oct. 9. More Americans identify as Republican than Democrats. WSJ reporter Aaron Zi