The drop in stock markets and the rise in the dollar are acting like a brake on the U.S. economic recovery, Dallas Federal Reserve President Robert Kaplan said.
The company offered plans in New York and New Jersey through exchanges created under the Affordable Care Act.
An early-week rally fizzled as investors look to the latest U.S. jobs figures on Friday for a signal.
Flipping -- buying and reselling a home to make a quick buck -- above a peak set in 2005, just two years before the U.S. mortgage market started to collapse.
Claims for benefits unexpectedly rose last week, but the underlying trend continues to point to a strengthening labor market.
As Volkswagen’s biggest profit center, Audi’s earnings are seen as an early indicator of the fortunes of the world’s second largest car maker.
The South Korean smartphone maker echoed Apple’s arguments against the FBI’s request to build backdoors into the iPhone, saying it would undermine customers’ trust.
The German shoemaker had come under pressure from investors for losing ground to larger rival Nike over the past few years.
A collapse in oil prices and relatively low exposure to global financial turbulence should drive India’s economic growth the International Monetary Fund said Wednesday.
Latin America's biggest economy plunged 3.8 percent last year, the worst performance by a major economy in 2015, according to reports.
The funds are vital for the Japanese conglomerate as it streamlines its businesses, whose poor performances have been masked by years of false accounting.
The yen held at around 113 to the U.S. dollar Thursday after a big gain Wednesday.
Volkswagen said a memo was sent to former CEO Martin Winterkorn in May 2014 about a study by U.S. researchers that raised questions about VW diesel emissions.
Forbes announced its annual list of the world’s richest individuals. While many of the same people are on it, they have lost some wealth.
The debt-ridden island’s crumbling public health infrastructure is just one reason.
Economic activity expanded in some districts but fell or remained flat in others, the Fed said in its latest report.
The former CEO of Chesapeake Energy, considered the leader of the U.S. shale revolution, had been charged with conspiring to rig bids for oil and gas leases.
The U.K. government says recasting Britain’s international trade deals after leaving the European Union would lead to uncertainty and costs, a point independent experts validate.
The release of the latest edition of the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book helped drive stocks up in afternoon trading.
Despite struggles in energy and manufacturing, the private sector added 214,000 jobs in February.
A renewed drop in crude oil prices weighed more than expected on inflation within the eurozone in February.
The indictment of Aubrey McClendon paves the way for what may be one of the highest-profile criminal antitrust cases against a well-known U.S. CEO in decades.
The American sporting goods retailer has been in debt since a $1.3 billion buyout in 2006 turned the company private.
Most European stocks tracked robust gains in Asian markets while U.S. stock futures traded in the red.
The tariffs marked the second time since December that the U.S. has penalized foreign steel producers for selling the metal at unfairly low prices.
Investors are also hoping the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan announce more stimulus measures when they meet this month, following the lead of the People’s Bank of China.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission alleges Pennsylvania-based Scott Medical Health Center discriminated against a gay employee.
Three global financial exchanges are jostling to acquire the historic stock trading center — and it’s the derivatives business they want.
There’s a fire sale going on in the global mining sector, with companies offloading assets amid plunging prices for commodities and sluggish growth in China.
Thanks to low gas prices and interest rates, cars and trucks flew out of U.S. showrooms last month at the highest rate since 2000.