Comment on Business News Roundup, July 3

Business News Roundup, July 3

Intel President Renee James, who has worked at the Santa Clara chipmaker for 28 years, plans to leave the company early next year to seek a CEO role elsewhere. James has agreed to stay with Intel until January to oversee the transition, and will be paid $4 million to do so, according to a filling with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Arvind Sodhani, president of Intel’s venture capital unit, will retire in January after 35 years at the company, and Vice Presidents Hermann Eula and Michael Bell will also leave the company. Jobless rate Employers added 223,000 jobs in June, and the unemployment rate fell to 5.3 percent, a seven-year low. The numbers raised expectations that the Federal Reserve will start raising interest rates by September. [...] the Labor Department said the unemployment rate dropped from 5.5 percent in May mostly because many people out of work gave up on their job searches and were no longer counted as unemployed. Philadelphia has legalized and plans to tax Airbnb and other short-term rentals ahead of Pope Francis’ visit in September and next year’s Democratic National Convention. Airbnb said the city became the nation’s largest to make rentals through online marketplaces legal, which San Francisco and Portland have done. Philadelphia changed zoning rules to allow rentals in residential areas and is subjecting them to an 8.5 percent hotel tax. Spanish-language broadcasting company Univision Holdings filed plans Thursday for an initial public offering. Univision’s principal unit is Media Networks, which operates Univision Network and UniMas. Average long-term mortgage rates rose this week, reaching highs for the year. Mortgage giant Freddie Mac said Thursday the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose to 4.08 percent from 4.02 percent a week earlier. The rate on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages increased to 3.24 percent from 3.21 percent. The average rate on five-year adjustable-rate mortgages ticked up from 2.98 to 2.99 percent. “As we work to create the absolute best experiences for Yahoo users, from time to time, we run small tests with a variety of partners including search providers,” the company said. The two companies renegotiated their agreement this year, giving Yahoo more freedom over how it makes money from ads.

 

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