Some of Monday’s top business news stories:
Associated Press
Trade war’s wounded: Companies improvise to dodge cost hikes, by Paul Wiseman
Industry wary of alternatives tries to protect a word: meat, by Grant Schulte
Bloomberg
The new American car recession has already started, by Keith Naughton, David Welch and Gabrielle Coppola
Millennial women are pouring into jobs, fueling U.S. labor gains, by Jeanna Smialek
Fortune
Canadian air traffic controllers are sending pizza to U.S. colleagues, by Veronica Neto
Why the Huawei affair hasn’t cooked Canada’s goose, by Clay Chandler
Reuters
PG&E talking to banks on multibillion dollar bankruptcy financing, by Mike Spector and Liana B. Baker
Sears bankruptcy raises old questions about costs of going broke, by Tom Hals
News about business journalism
Former New Mexican biz editor dies at 77
How the Quartz AI studio helps journalists write stories
Economics reporter da Costa joins Economic Policy Institute
Insider executive editor LoGiurato is leaving the company
Washington Post hires MacMillan to cover corporate accountability
ALM Media hires Araya as in-house desk editor
ProPublica hires Kofman as tech reporter
USA Today stocks reporter Shell takes buyout
This date in business journalism
2014: Forbes draws interest from international bidders
2009: Fortune to launch Korean edition