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Minnesota and Illinois file a lawsuit against the Trump administration to stop aggressive ICE raids, escalating the conflict between Democratic states and the federal government over immigration policy.
EPRA holds pump prices steady for the third month, dashing hopes for cheaper festive travel as landed costs for petrol dip by 4%.
Investors retreat from high-flying technology stocks following disappointing earnings from industry giants, casting doubt on the immediate returns of the multi-trillion-shilling artificial intelligence boom.
Young Kenyans rushed to turn rented apartments into cash cows, but market saturation, aggressive taxmen, and empty calendars are turning the 'passive income' dream into a financial nightmare.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves announces a sweeping overhaul to treat digital assets like stocks—a move likely to reshape the global markets where millions of Kenyans trade.
Rising wages and looser lending rules are pushing buyers to skip starter homes, with significant implications for the Kenyan diaspora navigating Britain’s property ladder.
As the death toll reaches 16, the Israeli Prime Minister claims Canberra’s foreign policy fueled the violence, sparking a fierce diplomatic row.
With 380,000 graduates in default and a recovery system legally barred from making arrests, the revolving fund meant to educate the next generation is grinding to a halt. CEO Geoffrey Monari warns: "We cannot fund the future if the past refuses to pay."
From skiing on trash to taming the matatu mafia, Denmark’s capital offers a radical blueprint for fixing Nairobi’s broken urban heart.
High power bills and regulatory chaos are handing our lunch to neighbors, warns a damning new report by manufacturers.
America now holds nearly 40% of the world’s millionaire population, a figure that dwarfs emerging markets and highlights the enduring power of the dollar economy.
Millions of barrels remain stranded after Washington’s first cargo capture since 2019, sparking diplomatic fury and signaling potential volatility for global energy markets.
The Ministry of Trade remains unyielding on the revised Standards Levy, dismissing warnings that raising the annual cap from KES 400,000 to KES 4 million will trigger a fresh wave of inflation for the Kenyan consumer.