Monday, November 25, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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As Jumbo Fresh opens in Southwest Baltimore, a sense of excitement — and fear of failure

At 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, Laverne Carter sprung from bed and darted for West Pratt Street, fueled by fantasies of a kitchen brimming with ripe tomatoes. She’s one of thousands in the seven neighborhoods that make up South Baltimore’s Sowebo community to be left without a grocery store in walking distance following the 2022 shuttering of Price Rite in Mount Clare Junction.

Maryland Commerce awards export grants to more than 100 businesses, including two locally

Over the past year, the Maryland Department of Commerce has awarded more than 100 small and midsize Maryland companies with ExportMD grants to help promote their products and services in the global marketplace. In Washington County, Cornerstone Genomics and Land Cruiser Heaven have been awarded grants.

CareFirst’s new DC Met Square HQ consolidates 1,500 employees in hybrid offices

CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield has consolidated six office locations across D.C. into one new headquarters at the recently renovated Met Square building located at 655 15th Street in Northwest. The new headquarters does not reduce CareFirst’s footprint across D.C. but does incorporate the not-for-profit health care company’s hybrid work model, allowing employees from different locations to use the space as needed.

Read More: WTOP
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Could Baltimore lose rank as top U.S. auto port? Officials say not without a fight

Before the deadly collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in March that halted Port of Baltimore vessel traffic, the port had long topped the nation in automobile shipments. But after losing business in the nearly three months before the Patapsco River’s main shipping channel fully reopened, the port’s top ranking in autos and light trucks going forward isn’t as sure a bet. Though final numbers won’t be available until the end of December, shipments of autos and roll-on, roll-off machinery, which includes agricultural equipment, are down year-over-year.

 

Read More: Baltimore Sun
South Baltimore marina sells to local group

South Baltimore’s Yacht Basin Marina has been acquired by a local investment group with plans to construct 150 boat slips and a building on the Middle Branch. The newly named BYB Marina sits near the emerging Locke Landing townhome and apartment development at Port Covington next to Nick’s Fish House. The property sold for an undisclosed price to BYB Prop Real Estate Partners.

Facebook parent Meta sees strong global ad sales while keeping AI costs in check

Meta Platforms (META.O), opens new tab beat market expectations for second-quarter revenue on Wednesday and issued a rosy sales forecast for the third quarter, signaling that robust digital-ad spending on its social media platforms can cover the cost of its artificial-intelligence investments. Shares of the company were up 6.8% after the bell. The Facebook and Instagram parent said it anticipates third-quarter revenue in the range of $38.5 billion to $41 billion, the midpoint of which is higher than analysts’ estimates of $39.1 billion, according to LSEG data.

Read More: Reuters
Powell says September rate cut ‘on the table’ if inflation data continues to cool

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday that the U.S. central bank could cut interest rates at its September meeting if economic data continues on its current path. “If that test is met, a reduction in our policy rate could be on the table as soon as the next meeting in September,” Powell said. Recent economic data has pointed toward inflation data falling back toward the central bank’s 2% target, while the unemployment rate has crept up above 4%.

Read More: CNBC
Why Baltimore chose an untested developer for its huge — now failed — Poppleton project

Dan Bythewood Jr. was an ambitious 29-year-old. The son of a wealthy Long Island orthodontist, Bythewood had no background in large-scale development when he and his newly formed real-estate development company sent a proposal to Baltimore in 2003. Give us a big chunk of land in West Baltimore, he wrote, and we will transform it into a glitzy, upscale neighborhood evoking Manhattan. (Photo: Giacomo Bologna/The Baltimore Banner)

Baltimore’s historic Hendler Creamery building: Going, going and soon-to-be gone

The ornamental stone eagle is gone. So are the carved faces on either side of the entrance, the stone basket-weave detailing under the pediment and numerous other architectural flourishes. Stripped-down as they are, the grand north and south-facing facades of the red-brick Hendler Creamery Building are still standing. But not for long.

Read More: Baltimore Brew
Two law firms ink leases in Baltimore County tower

Two local law firms have inked deals to relocate to a recently renovated building in the York Road corridor that is now nearing capacity. Bodie, Friddell & Grenzer P.C. and Coon & Cole LLC will occupy close to 13,000 square feet in the nine-story tower at 1301 York Road, formerly known as Heaver Plaza. The tower at York Road and the Beltway has been overhauled under a $7 million restoration by new owner ARLS Properties over the past few years.

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