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The Five Departments
Markets
Equities, fixed income, derivatives, commodities, and capital markets. Coverage of the exchanges, trading activity, and market structure that define financial conditions across New England and the nation.
Banking
Commercial and retail banking, lending, credit markets, and the institutions that move capital through the New England economy. Federal Reserve policy and its impact on regional financial institutions.
Real Estate
Commercial and residential property markets in Boston and across New England. Development, investment, zoning, and the economics of the built environment as a driver of regional wealth.
Wealth
Asset management, investment strategy, private equity, venture capital, and the institutions that steward financial wealth across the region. Endowments, foundations, and family offices.
Policy
Regulation, legislation, and the decisions of government bodies that shape financial markets and the economy. Federal and state financial regulation, tax policy, and the intersection of law and capital.
About State Street Journal
State Street Journal is the financial newspaper of record for Boston and New England, covering the markets, institutions, and policy decisions that govern capital across the region. Named for State Street in Boston's Financial District—where three centuries of commercial power have been centered—the Journal applies a single editorial standard to every story: does this financial development serve or threaten the stability and prosperity of the Republic?
Published by the Massachusetts Society of Journalism. No advertisements. No paywall. No data harvesting.
The first edition is being prepared.