Business Insider
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February 4, 2025
Hello there! For some longtime remote workers, back to the office might feel like going back in time. If you’re feeling a little rusty returning to the office, here are some etiquette tips.
In today’s newsletter, Mexico and Canada secured deals just under the wire to delay the implementation of President Trump’s aggressive trade plans. China, on the other hand, retaliated.
What’s on deck
Markets: Hedge funds’ January report cards are in.
Tech: A leaked Meta memo shows executives view this being the metaverse’s make-or-break year.
Business: The unexpected shutdown of USAID’s headquarters.
Top headlines:
- From JPMorgan to BlackRock: The 15 financial firms that file the most H-1B immigrant work visas.
- Federal employee unions are suing the Treasury and alleging Elon Musk’s DOGE gained illegal and ‘unprecedented’ access to data.
- Judge in Blake Lively, Justin Baldoni fracas tells their lawyers to stop trash-talking each other’s clients in the press.
- Elon Musk is officially an employee of the US government — but he’s not getting a paycheck.
- MDMA at night, Cheerios in the morning: The trippy rise of parenting while high.
- The House DOGE committee is setting its sights on NPR and PBS.
Curated by Dan DeFrancesco, Grace Lett, Ella Hopkins, Hallam Bullock, Amanda Yen, and Elisabeth Casolo.
This is a shorter version of our flagship newsletter, which brings you in-depth analysis and summaries of the top stories from Wall Street to Silicon Valley.
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