Warren Buffett’s conglomerate now owns about 13.7 percent of the oil refiner.
The new book has appeared as conservatives are set to spend about $900 million on U.S. political campaigns this year.
A U.S. Labor Department proposal could fundamentally change how investors obtain retirement advice. Here’s how.
Earnings of energy and other commodity companies in the last three months of 2015 have been “hideous,” and a strong dollar hasn’t helped.
The resulting shortage of steel parts could have an effect on the automaker’s plan to produce about 4.13 million vehicles in Japan this year.
Argentina is under pressure to comply with a court order to repay its debts before accepting any new lines of credit.
The plane, which is the fourth version of the original 737, will help airlines lower operating costs and boost fuel efficiency.
The cash-strapped U.S. territory is trying to solve an economic crisis before it hits substantial debt payments in May and July.
Last year was the most profitable one in decades for long-beleaguered U.S. carriers, which did not pass their jet-fuel savings on to their customers.
The U.S. Air Force has previously said it had earmarked $1.65 billion for two replacement jets for carrying the U.S. president.
Over the next several years, General Motors will undertake the most extensive overhaul of its vehicle development process in decades, it said.
Research shows you’ll likely get a raise if you ask for one, but more than half of employees still don’t ask. Here’s how to make it happen.
In April, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway reportedly will webcast a portion of its vaunted annual meeting for the first time.
Dockworkers reportedly stopped working Friday morning, but the reason behind the move was not immediately clear.
The No. 2 U.S. oil company reported a decline of nearly $590 million for the fourth quarter as plunging oil prices continued to take their toll.
The British bank has been ordered to disclose a report detailing why it has been slow to comply with laws against money laundering.
The company received two orders for 20 of the anti-submarine patrol aircraft from the U.S. Navy and the Royal Australian Air Force.
A World Health Organization warning that 4 million people in the Americas could get the virus exacerbated travel industry jitters.
The country's economy can only grow if the Taliban and other insurgent groups are stopped, according to a new report.
Under a proposed rule, companies would have to furnish federal regulators with more data about gender, race and ethnicity.
Negative interest rates are the strongest ammunition yet that Bank of Japan Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda has used to spur economic growth.
European shipping companies say they’re struggling to get insurance for oil tankers carrying Iranian crude because of U.S. restrictions.
Though major indexes closed higher Friday, the S&P 500 saw its worst January since 2009 and Nasdaq posted its worst month in nearly six years.
The economy cooled in the last three months of the year, with manufacturers and miners taking the brunt of the pain.
At the Investor Summit on Climate Risk at the United Nations headquarters this week, investors lauded the financial potential of global clean energy projects.
Harriet Tubman, a former U.S. slave nicknamed "Moses," went on many expeditions to take slaves out of slavery.
Congressional delays on a multibillion-dollar defense deal are threatening hundreds of production line jobs in St. Louis.
The Japanese company reiterated its annual revenue forecast Friday as it reduces dependence on its bread-and-butter consumer electronics business.
The move by the world’s largest automaker would help it consolidate a key unit for small cars sold in Southeast Asia and Japan.
Asian stock markets soared in approval of Bank of Japan's move to adopt negative interest rates Friday.