
Daniel Geiger
Real Estate Correspondent at Business Insider
Real estate correspondent for @businessinsider. Formerly @crainsnewyork. Reach me at [email protected]/646 352 2884 (signal/whatsapp).
Articles
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1 week ago |
businessinsider.com | Hannah Beckler |Rosemarie Ho |Ellen Thomas |Daniel Geiger
Columbus, Ohio, escaped the Rust Belt rut years ago. Regional economic development officials offered incentives that attracted warehouses, manufacturing plants, and healthcare startups, reviving the economy and generating jobs. By 2018, hundreds of these deals over the previous eight years had created some 150,000 jobs. Central Ohio now hopes to repeat that success. It's betting big on "Silicon Heartland," a high-tech innovation hub that proponents hope will be flush with high-paying jobs.
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1 week ago |
aol.com | Hannah Beckler |Rosemarie Ho |Ellen Thomas |Daniel Geiger
Columbus, Ohio, escaped the Rust Belt rut years ago. Regional economic development officials offered incentives that attracted warehouses, manufacturing plants, and healthcare startups, reviving the economy and generating jobs. By 2018, hundreds of these deals over the previous eight years had created some 150,000 jobs. Central Ohio now hopes to repeat that success. It's betting big on "Silicon Heartland," a high-tech innovation hub that proponents hope will be flush with high-paying jobs.
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1 week ago |
yahoo.com | Hannah Beckler |Rosemarie Ho |Ellen Thomas |Daniel Geiger
Columbus, Ohio, escaped the Rust Belt rut years ago. Regional economic development officials offered incentives that attracted warehouses, manufacturing plants, and healthcare startups, reviving the economy and generating jobs. By 2018, hundreds of these deals over the previous eight years had created some 150,000 jobs. Central Ohio now hopes to repeat that success. It's betting big on "Silicon Heartland," a high-tech innovation hub that proponents hope will be flush with high-paying jobs.
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3 weeks ago |
businessinsider.com | Michelle Abrego |Daniel Geiger |Henry Blodget
Brookfield Properties, which operates one of the country's largest commercial real estate portfolios, laid off a handful of executives in its office division on Thursday, according to a person with direct knowledge of the downsizing. In its New York headquarters, the firm let go of three office leasing executives, an executive who oversees asset management, and an employee who was part of an internal group that manages art installations and events, the person familiar with the cuts said.
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3 weeks ago |
businessinsider.com | Kaja Whitehouse |Daniel Geiger |Henry Blodget
Spencer Levine, the president of RAL, a family-owned New York City-based commercial real estate investment and development firm, had expected a promising year for property dealmaking. Like many investors in the industry, Levine believed interest rates would fall, the economy would remain solid, and more commercial real estate assets would hit the market for sale after two years of diminished activity — allowing buyers like him to snap up opportunities.
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Commercial real estate was pumped about @realDonaldTrump's return to the White House. Now the market is faltering: https://t.co/ZzVSBcmafU

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