Utilities retired nearly 5 percent of U.S. coal power capacity last year, including plants built more than six decades ago.
The company has been hit hard by a global drop in commodity prices and the German government’s shift toward renewable energy.
Chinese media say the ban is unfair and could deal a “heavy blow” to the world’s fourth-largest telecom equipment maker.
Toshiba put its medical equipment unit on the block to help fund restructuring after a $1.3 billion accounting scandal.
Oil fell back below $40 a barrel while China reported that its exports slumped 24 percent in February.
The embattled drugmaker will award one of the seats to Pershing Square Capital Management, one of its biggest investors, sources said.
Pot lobbying groups jumped on the Rand Paul bandwagon last year. Here’s why they aren’t doing the same for Bernie Sanders.
The home improvement retailer will set up a $13 million fund to reimburse shoppers for out-of-pocket losses resulting from the 2014 incident.
David Crane, a former CEO of power company NRG Energy, says his next project might involve turning homes into mini power plants.
Two shareholders’ nomination of six potential directors was the latest in a series of challenges for the third-largest U.S. airline.
Porsche and TAG Heuer joined Nike in distancing themselves from Russian tennis star Maria Sharapova, who admitted Monday to failing a drug test.
The central bank’s offer, ahead of a Brexit vote, aims to prevent bank runs and avoid the kind of chaos seen in the 2008 financial crisis.
The $8.5 billion luxury fashion brand has sought counsel after discovering that a mystery investor had amassed a significant stake in the company.
The Republican’s presidential campaign is winning support from workers who are angry at the Democratic Party establishment.
Meanwhile, the automaker's emissions scandal will inflict “substantial and painful” financial damage, CEO Matthias Mueller said.
Oxbow Mining is not entitled to a "royalty rate reduction" because the move would not revive a shuttered mine, federal officials said.
A bank unit and Rhode Island's economic development arm defrauded investors to fund a former major league pitcher's video game company, federal officials said.
Revised data on Japan's gross domestic product show it contracted 1.1 percent in the fourth quarter, not 1.4 percent.
In a filing Monday, the Justice Department cited a California decision as evidence that a law has been used to compel Apple to unlock iPhones.
The troubled Michigan city has lost 40,000 manufacturing jobs in the past 15 years. What Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton got wrong and right on Nafta.
The German automaker says it no longer needs the California company to build future B-Class electric cars.
A study finds that people who use these clinics for minor ailments spend more on healthcare than those who did not go to such centers.
Engineer Steven Mateski can pursue claims that the defense giant violated the federal False Claims Act, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled.
Markets that rallied after Brazil's former president was detained for questioning in a corruption case involving the energy company may see a reversal.
Sales plunged 70 percent last month, compared with the previous year, amid uncertainties wrought by China’s economic slowdown.
Japan gets ready for International Women’s Day with some wishing there was more to celebrate. In spite of a push to get more women into leadership, the nation's movers and shakers are still mostly male.
The average bonus paid out to Wall Street workers on 2015 profits fell 9 percent to $146,200, its lowest since 2012, according to a report.
A British departure from the European Union would be a costly disaster, Germany’s Ifo Institute says.
Momentum from Friday’s better-than-expected U.S. jobs report fizzled Monday as investors look ahead to European moves on stimulus.
The global cartel is privately considering a new oil price equilibrium of $50 a barrel, according to one of the industry’s leading prognosticators.