Please do not leave this page until complete. This can take a few moments.
One of the most popular craft beer breweries in the state of Maine, Oxbow Brewing Co. LLC, filed a notice with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allowing for the Newcastle-based company to solicit $1 million in private equity investment.
Every year, Mainebiz asks some of the state's leading economists to look to the coming year and offer their thoughts, worries and forecasts. We may be out of the recession, but there is plenty of uncertainty out there. Our experts weighed in with
Two months after its assets were acquired, the former site of Harbor Technologies has been put on the market for $2.5 million.
The Kennebunk-based charcoal maker, Wicked Good Charcoal Inc., has sued a New Jersey company for allegedly stealing customers by using its trademark.
The members of a union representing one third of the workers at the pulp mill in Baileyville voted this week to authorize a strike, but both union and mill officials say they want to avoid reaching that point.
PTC (NASDAQ: PTC), an Internet of Things technology company based in Needham, Mass., announced today it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Kepware, a Portland-based software development company, for approximately $100 million.
Kennebec Technologies, a precision machining company in Augusta, will be converted into an employee stock ownership plan, effective Jan. 1.
A Maine man has received a federal patent for fins he created to help amputees swim better and expects to begin commercial production next month.
The largest union at Bath Iron Works narrowly approved a new contract Sunday, a move the shipyard says will put it in a better position to win an important contract next spring.
The Biddeford-based outdoor equipment manufacturer recently raised more than $1 million from investors to help it grow.
The asset liquidation group that purchased the Lincoln Paper and Tissue mill says it hopes to attract an operator to restart the mill, but union and town officials are skeptical that will happen.
The proposed four-year Bath Iron Works labor contract headed to a union vote Sunday does away with pay raises in favor of annual bonuses and includes provisions expanding tasks some workers must perform.
Work done by the Maine Manufacturing Extension Partnership in 2014 led to the creation or retention of more than 400 jobs and saved 48 companies more than $10.1 million, according to a recent study.
Bath Iron Works and Local S6 of the Machinists union, the largest union at the shipyard, reached a tentative agreement on a four-year contract proposal Tuesday night.
A Maine company that manufactures multi-use cloths from wood fiber is ramping up production and hopes to add 35 workers over the next two years.
The Navy has agreed to award a contract to build a destroyer at Bath Iron Works in addition to the five already under contract, but Congress must still authorize and approve funding for the sixth ship.