Susan J. Aluise

Susan J. Aluise

Susan J. Aluise is president and executive editor of National News Syndicate, a Washington, D.C.-based news organization focused on global business, national security, information technology, transportation and financial services. Prior to forming the company in January 1996, she spent a decade at Potomac, Md.-based Phillips Business Information — the last six years as editorial director. She has launched 31 subscription-based news publications and websites in the Aviation, Financial Services, Defense, Information Technology and Telecom industries, including Aviation Today, World Airport Week, Credit Risk Management Report and Electronic Commerce Insider. In a journalism career spanning more than 30 years, Susan has covered six U.S. presidents and 15 Congresses for a variety of U.S. and global news organizations. She also has covered several international political and economic summits and was honored by a national journalism foundation for excellence in news and analysis following the 9/11 terror attacks.

Recent Articles

Grocery Stocks: 2 to Buy, 2 to Leave on the Shelf

Grocery stocks are usually stable, conservative dividends-paying stocks -- which makes these dull darlings worth browsing. Here are 2 to buy, and 2 to skip.

For-Profit Education Stocks: 2 That Pass, 2 That Fail

Although some for-profit education stocks are trading near 52-week highs, they're threatened by lower enrollments and more stringent federal regulations.

Auto Sales: Best Cars and Best Trucks for October

Pickup trucks and luxury vehicles led October auto sales. Here’s the breakdown of the best cars and best trucks for October.

4 Things We Learned About Airlines After Earnings

Airline stocks have soared in 2013, but can they hold that altitude? Here are four things that we learned about airlines from their earnings reports.

Auto Reliability Ratings Shake Things Up for European Brands

Consumer Reports’ just-released annual auto reliability ratings appears to say, “Buy Japanese." But TM and others have reason for concern.