The CEO of the world’s largest oil company said Tuesday it is eyeing expansion around the world and is planning “significant growth” in output in 2016.
The San Francisco-based company has agreed to open its books to both Pfizer and Amgen, Reuters reported.
The Swiss lender, which is trying to slim its volatile investment banking unit, posted a pretax loss of nearly $500 million in the first quarter of 2016.
The total number of passenger vehicles sold in the world’s second-biggest economy grew compared to April of last year.
Inflation appeared to be driven largely by higher food prices, rather than an improvement in broader economic activity.
Asian shares got off to a weak start on Tuesday, though Japanese shares got a tailwind as the dollar stood tall against the yen.
The yen nursed broad losses early on Tuesday, after showing its biggest one-day fall in more than two weeks on Monday.
Uber and smaller rival Lyft are attempting to settle legal actions by drivers who contend they should be classified as employees entitled to reimbursement for expenses.
The San Francisco-based apparel retailer’s shares fell about 10 percent in extended trading on Monday.
Five of 10 S&P sectors ended higher Monday, led by health’s 1.13 percent increase, while energy and materials both tumbled 1.25 percent.
Here are the two reasons economists cheer a rising “quits rate.”
With the resignation of CEO Renaud Laplanche, LendingClub finds itself at the center of challenges facing the marketplace lending sector.
Once the deal is completed, the nearly 80-year-old bakery, best known for its glazed doughnuts, will be run as a private entity.
Manufacturing’s job problem undercuts hopeful forecasts that U.S. companies would bring significant numbers of jobs back from overseas.
A source told the Communist Party newspaper People’s Daily that Beijing should rein in leverage and accept slower growth.
Shanghai arrested 1,100 people for civil disobedience in March. What were they doing? Driving for Uber and other ride-hailing apps — and challenging China’s tightly regulated taxi sector.
The price hike Monday extends a rally that has been underway for most of this year.
A Chinese beverage company had registered “face book” as its trademark in 2014, a move that a Beijing court ruled “violated moral principles.”
The supervisory board of Saft unanimously approved the takeover by the French oil giant, the companies said in a joint statement Monday.
After a 112-year absence from the Olympics, the sport of golf — and the $70 billion industry that supports it — has a unique opportunity in Rio de Janeiro to hit its way out of the bunker.
Japanese newspaper Nikkei reported that regions affected by the additional recall would include the U.S., Europe, Asia, Oceania and Latin America.
A disappointing U.S. jobs report raised questions about the underlying strength of the world’s biggest economy.
The dollar initially fell on Friday after headline payrolls data showed the U.S. economy added the fewest jobs in seven months in April.
The ride-hailing companies poured millions into an effort to change the Texas capital's ordinances on taxi services.
The new Customer Due Diligence rule lets financial institutions list a figurehead as a shell company's "beneficial" or true owner, critics say.
The U.S. should wiggle out of its debt payments, the Republican presidential hopeful said. Economists aren’t so sure.
Adhering to various regulations now costs $84,671 per new home, a rise of nearly 30 percent since 2011, a report said.
CEO Carsten Spohr has his eyes on two airline groups to add to the German carrier’s already massive fleet.
The new energy minister is one of a handful of Saudi figures whose views are closely watched by those seeking insight into the world’s largest crude oil exporter.
Merchants who don’t have chip-compliant payment systems will no longer get reimbursed by banks for purchases made with counterfeit cards.