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Aircraft engine startup plans manufacturing facility in Canton after $3.5M round

A local aircraft engine manufacturer has raised a $3.5 million round and now plans to open a new manufacturing facility in Baltimore. North American Wave Engine Corp. plans to build a 7,500-square-foot facility at the Baltimore Heliport on the Canton Waterfront to develop and manufacture engines and aircraft.

Baltimore nanotech company Pixelligent raises $38M in new financing

Baltimore nanotechnology company Pixelligent has raised $38 million to help fund the commercialization of its technology to help improve augmented reality headsets and displays. The money comes through a funding vehicle managed by MVolution Partners. The funding vehicle is akin to a loan backed by the value of Pixelligent’s patents. Aon, a financial services company, evaluated the value of the Baltimore company’s intellectual property to facilitate the loan. The loan enables Pixelligent to gain capital without needing to dilute control of the company by giving up more equity.

Love paper bags with sale text
Black Friday habits have shifted, but Baltimore-area shoppers seek bargains and hold on to traditions

To some Baltimore-area shoppers, the hallmarks of past Black Fridays such as long lines, jammed aisles and countdowns to doorbuster deals seemed a distant memory on Friday. Economic concerns and stretched-out retail promotions have altered day-after-Thanksgiving shopping patterns. So have increased online buying and stay-at-home habits formed during the pandemic. “This is definitely not like the early 2000s, with wraparound lines and all the craziness,” said Christine Gower, a mental health therapist from White Marsh. “It’s actually way more relaxed this year.” With elevated prices for food, rent, gasoline and other essentials, many people were reluctant to spend unless there was a big sale. Shoppers were being more selective, dipping more into savings and turning to “buy now, pay later” installment services.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
States take key role in fighting fake online reviews

With studies showing that at least three-quarters of online shoppers check product and service reviews before they buy, the evaluations have become more important than ever in global commerce. But fake reviews upend the system. In the United States, state attorneys general and a key federal agency are leading efforts to crack down on false or manipulated reviews that can lead to purchases of shoddy products or services and sometimes leave little recourse for consumers. Still, efforts to address the problem pale in comparison to the number of fake reviews and the economic damage they cause, according to recent studies from the Center for Data Innovation and the World Economic Forum.

Lawyer representing Peter Angelos in his family’s fight over his fortune has conflicts of interest, son Louis’ attorney says

A lawyer for Louis Angelos, who has sued his mother and brother over control of the Orioles, the law firm and other assets of his father Peter Angelos, says the attorney appointed to represent the incapacitated family patriarch should be disqualified because of conflicts of interest. Benjamin Rosenberg, who represents Peter Angelos, has “an extreme and uncontrolled animus” toward his own client’s law firm, according to a letter Louis Angelos’ attorney wrote to the judge in the case. Louis Angelos has been running the law firm in the several years since his father has been incapacitated by illness.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
‘Zombie debt’: Homeowners face foreclosure on old mortgages

Rose Prophete thought the second mortgage loan on her Brooklyn home was resolved about a decade ago — until she received paperwork claiming she owed more than $130,000. “I was shocked,” said Prophete, who refinanced her two-family home in 2006, six years after arriving from Haiti. “I don’t even know these people because they never contacted me. They never called me.” Prophete is part of a wave of homeowners who say they were blindsided by the start of foreclosure actions on their homes over second loans that were taken out more than a decade ago. The trusts and mortgage loan servicers behind the actions say the loans were defaulted on years ago. Some of these homeowners say they weren’t even aware they had a second mortgage because of confusing loan structures. Others believed their second loans were rolled in with their first mortgage payments or forgiven.

Northeast Maglev launches STEAM enrichment program

Northeast Maglev, a Baltimore-based company focused on bringing the world’s fastest train to the Northeast corridor, recently launched a STEAM afterschool enrichment program. Designed by former educators, students learn through hands-on experimentation about the science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics principles that make the SCMAGLEV train operate. Northeast Maglev teamed up with Restoring Inner-City Hope (RICH) to launch the program, hosting third-, fourth- and fifth-grade students at the RICH headquarters in the south Baltimore neighborhood of Cherry Hill. The event was part of Northeast Maglev’s celebration of National Education Month, which is observed every November.

Symbolic house made from one hundred dollars isolated on white background
As inflation continues, here’s how Baltimore ranks for affordability

While Baltimore has long been touted as a more affordable option to Washington, D.C., it’s still a lot more expensive to live here than in most of the nation. Baltimore ranks 84th for affordability among the country’s 100 largest metro areas, according to a new Business Journals analysis of the latest data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ Regional Price Parity Index. The index shows how costs compare in a metro compared to the national baseline of 100. That means a metro with an index of 90 would be 10% more affordable than the national average, for example. That index includes the cost of housing, services and goods as well, providing a more complete picture of affordability.

Maryland booze news: A hard tea and a new distillery

Frederick, Maryland-based Flying Dog Brewery has launched a new business beyond beer called Gonzo Drinks, and its first product is a hard tea. Killer Hard Tea is available at retailers in Maryland now, and will be in D.C. stores., as well as New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia, in January. Killer Hard Tea has an ABV of 8%, is lemon flavored, and is sold in 12-packs of 12-ounce cans. It is lightly carbonated. Flying Dog, founded in 1990, currently ranks as the 35th-largest craft brewer in the country, based on sales volume, according to the Brewers Association. A new distillery has opened in White Plains, Maryland, just south of Waldorf. Copper Compass Craft Distilling Co. is co-owned by cousins Herb Banks, a 23-year Navy veteran, and April Toyer, a pediatric dentist.

Read More: WTOP News
Md. Port Administration receives $150K grant for coastal resiliency assessment

The Maryland Department of Transportation Maryland Port Administration (MDOT MPA) has been awarded a $150,000 Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) grant under its Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities Program. The grant will help the MPA develop a thorough flood and storm vulnerability assessment and improve overall coastal resiliencies at the six state-owned public marine terminals of Maryland’s Helen Delich Bentley Port of Baltimore. The study will also include the World Trade Center Baltimore, which houses the MPA’s executive offices as well as adjacent communities to the public terminals in Baltimore city and Baltimore and Anne Arundel counties.

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