The oil field services company's plan to combine with Baker Hughes will face Justice Department opposition, a report said.
However, the Swiss manufacturer’s heavy investment in developing its first business jet weighed on financial results.
"Really robust" talks to resolve the automaker's emissions scandal were uncertain to produce an accord by April 21, the EPA chief said.
Shares of the media giant were a major drag on the Dow on Tuesday after the company said a veteran executive will step down.
The drug company said Tuesday that a board committee had completed a review of accounting practices and had not found any new issues.
The world economy’s prospects will decline further unless authorities take stronger action, International Monetary Fund head Christine Lagarde warned Tuesday.
Edward Jones, the largest privately held broker-dealer, braces for new rules that would limit conflicts of interest in investment advice — and potentially upend the industry.
However, the retailer’s revenue in the period, which came in at $30.18 billion, fell short of consensus estimates.
The pending $160 billion merger came under threat after U.S. Treasury Department took new steps to curb tax-avoiding corporate “inversions.”
Shares were down in early trading Tuesday, pressured by losses on Wall Street against a backdrop of slumping crude oil prices.
BP could save $5.35 billion in income tax as a federal judge in New Orleans finalizes the settlement resulting from the 2010 oil spill.
A U.S. judge granted final approval to the settlement after BP agreed in July to pay up to $18.7 billion in penalties.
The biggest drug companies have more than doubled the U.S. prices of popular treatments over the past five years.
Tom Staggs was widely expected to be the media and entertainment company's next chief executive, succeeding current CEO Bob Iger.
The Silicon Valley automaker sold 14,280 cars in the quarter, below its target of 16,000, citing a Model X parts shortage.
HSBC, Credit Suisse and UBS all appear among the top 10 banks that set up shell companies through the law firm Mossack Fonseca.
The decision Monday leaves intact a 2014 ruling by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court that largely upheld a lower court judgment awarding $187 million to the plaintiffs.
U.K. billionaire Richard Branson said he couldn’t stop the $2.6 billion takeover by Alaska Air due to U.S. restrictions on foreign investment.
Businesses ranging from Silicon Valley venture capitalists to a small Massachusetts solar installer say the solar and wind energy company owes them money.
The deal will boost Alaska Air’s annual revenue to over $7 billion and save the combined company $225 million a year, the U.S. carrier said Monday.
Investor sentiment perked up after data showed a sustained recovery in the U.S. labor market and a rebound in Chinese manufacturing activity.
The massive recall was triggered by defective power steering and a part that controls the electric current in the vehicles.
The move is believed to be the world’s largest private-equity firm’s biggest acquisition in India.
New documents reveal the mining giant was linked to at least 19 companies registered in the British Virgin Islands with Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca’s assistance.
Prices held steady in early trading Monday after solid U.S. payroll data underpinned investor risk sentiment.
Adding to concerns of a global glut, U.S. production has remained stubbornly high despite steep cuts in drilling for new reserves.
The dollar was on the defensive early on Monday, nursing deep losses against the euro and yen.
Some analysts said the company could have trouble filling all the initial Model 3 orders, which are accompanied by a refundable $1,000 deposit, until 2020.
The numbers now show Citigroup and Bank of America ahead of fifth-place Deutsche Bank.
Wall Street’s key concern has been that the Fed will raise rates at a quicker clip than investors are expecting.