
Venture for Athletes Wins ¼ø»Æʦapp Business Pitch Competition
Venture for Athletes won the $10,000 first prize in the 15th annual Business Pitch Competition sponsored by ¼ø»Æʦapp's College of Business and the Adams Center for Entrepreneurship.

¼ø»Æʦapp Poll: Hispanic Consumers Wary at Start of 2023
Hispanic consumers less optimistic at the beginning of 2023, concerned about the U.S. economy in the short and long term, according to a new poll from the ¼ø»Æʦapp Business and Economics Polling Initiative.

¼ø»Æʦapp Hosts 54th annual Honors Convocation
¼ø»Æʦapp recently hosted the University's 54th annual Honors Convocation at the University Theatre in the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters, Boca Raton campus.

AACSB Extends ¼ø»Æʦapp College of Business' Accreditation
¼ø»Æʦapp's College of Business remains one of a select group of academic institutions with global accreditation in business, a universal standard certifying a program's quality.

Study: Retail Workers Struggling with Deviant Customers
Labor shortages and fiscal pressure have forced new responsibilities on retail workers, according to researchers at ¼ø»Æʦapp and three other schools.

NIL Deal Could be Game-changer for Amateur Athletes in Smaller Sports
A Clemson University lacrosse player's landmark NIL deal could be the catalyst for similar arrangements for amateur athletes who play non-revenue-generating sports, according to expert at ¼ø»Æʦapp.

U.S. Home Prices Moderate, but Buyers are Still Paying Hefty Premiums
Atlanta is the nation's most overvalued housing market, although Florida remains at the center of the U.S. real estate correction, new research shows.

¼ø»Æʦapp's College of Business Receives Grant from JPMorgan Chase
¼ø»Æʦapp's College of Business has received a sponsorship from JP Morgan Chase's Women on the Move to create programs and opportunities to prepare ¼ø»Æʦapp from many backgrounds in the finance industry.

Could Changes in Fed's Interest Rates Affect the Environment?
A study by ¼ø»Æʦapp's College of Business explored the interplay between domestic and international monetary policy impacts and CO2 emissions.

Study: Renting Beats Buying in Vast Majority of U.S.
Despite widespread home price declines, renting still makes more sense than owning in the vast majority of U.S. housing markets, according to researchers at ¼ø»Æʦapp and FIU.