The index hit a nine-month high Monday in a market buoyed by Hasbro and Disney, as investors braced for a flurry of quarterly reports.
Pacific Investment Management says the insurer caused big losses by lying about its subprime mortgage exposure before its 2008 bailout.
The world’s largest cruise ship operator says it will accept bookings by Cuban-Americans, even though there’s no guarantee Cuba will allow them to come ashore.
Pressured by labor groups calling for higher wages at retail chains, the company reportedly will implement the increases in May.
The health insurance giant led by CEO Stephen Hemsley has threatened to pull out of exchanges created under the Affordable Care Act.
Oil currently sells near $40 a barrel, down from around $100 a barrel two years ago, but households have generally assumed the decline is temporary, wrote the Fed researchers.
The closely watched stock index, which tracks the largest U.S. companies, made it past the 18,000 mark for the first time since July 2015.
Investors cheered the first step in impeaching Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, but a government headed by Vice President Michel Temer won’t have it easy.
The Massachusetts senator and financial reform advocate will star in a comic book series that highlights the contributions of powerful women.
Pay for U.S. executives dipped 3.8 percent last year, but healthcare leaders like Medtronic CEO Omar Ishrak emerged mostly unscathed.
A walkout has slashed the country's oil output by more than half, offsetting worries about a scuttled plan by major oil producers to freeze production.
PepsiCo has handled sliding demand for fizzy sodas better than rival Coca-Cola Co. as its snacks business has offset much of the impact of a shift in demand.
Stock futures of the bank, whose quarterly result beat Wall Street expectations, were trading over 2 percent higher during pre-market trade following the announcement.
The breakdown of talks in Doha fueled investor fears that a production cut may not be agreed upon until the next meeting in June.
The Airbus Asia Training Centre opened Monday, an addition to three facilities that Airbus already runs in Miami, Beijing and France.
The Malaysian state investment fund was also burdened with debt of over $12 million over the years, Bank Negara Malaysia told the government in 2014.
Over 40 firms had initially expressed interest when Yahoo was first placed on the block under pressure from activist investor Starboard Value.
Prices in 70 cities rose an average of 4.9 percent in March from 12 months ago, but prices still fell in 29 cities, with unsold inventory a major problem.
Pharmaceutical companies are only just emerging from a tough stretch known as the patent cliff. Recent bad press hasn't helped the industry, either.
U.S. oil and gas major Chevron is also seeking buyers for its Asian geothermal energy blocks valued at about $3 billion, a report said.
Shares were dragged down Monday by tumbling crude oil futures after a failure by producers to address the global supply glut.
Markets were unsettled early Monday after a deal to freeze oil production by OPEC and non-OPEC producers fell apart on Sunday.
Investors also will be looking at the European Central Bank for its next move on its bond-buying program.
The drugmaker has been looking at Medivation, which focuses on cancer treatments, for the past six months, the Sunday Times reported.
Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump on Sunday asserted that China has waged “economic war” against the United States.
The team will grow to around 10 members by March next year and focus on mergers and acquisitions to begin with.
Last year, people living outside their native countries sent home around $440 billion, three times more than global development aid.
Authors Helen Davis Chaitman and Lance Gotthoffer say JPMorgan Chase was making too much money off Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme to do anything about it.
An American healthcare software provider alleged that Tata Consultancy Services had “brazenly” stolen trade secrets to help a rival company.
The news marked a vote of confidence by employees a year after the company said it would outsource 1,150 positions.