Amazon over the next month will face union elections at separate warehouses in New York City. (WSJ)
Sales of new homes in the U.S. fell 2% from January to February despite rising inventory. (MarketWatch)
The U.K. government slashed the country’s fuel tax after inflation in February reached a 30-year high. (WSJ)
The Biden administration will allow hundreds of goods from China to avoid paying tariffs. (WSJ)
Chinese authorities found a black box believed to be the cockpit voice recorder of the crashed China Eastern passenger jet. (WSJ)
General Mills raised its outlook on resilient demand and expectations that higher prices will help offset cost pressures. (WSJ)
A Senate panel passed and sent to the Senate floor a measure that would overhaul U.S. maritime regulation. (gCaptain)
Ocean Network Express plans to invest $20 billion under a strategic plan that would boost container shipping capacity by more than a third by 2030. (The Loadstar)
South Carolina's Port of Charleston has stopped forecasting when it will clear a backlog of more than two dozen vessels . (Journal of Commerce)
The U.S. seized suspected Iranian oil cargoes being carried on two Greek-owned tankers. (TradeWinds)
Goldman Sachs will pay $140 million for a stake in thermal packaging specialist TemperPack Technologies. (DC Velocity)
Idaho-based building materials distributor Woodgrain will acquire Huttig Building Products for $350 million in cash. (Modern Distribution Management)
Amazon plans to build a 600,000-square-foot distribution center near Northern Colorado Regional Airport under a plan originally called “Project Sugar.” (Daily Coloradoan)
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