The accident, which involved a malfunctioning air bag manufactured by Japan's Takata, marked the 11th such fatality worldwide and the second outside the U.S.
Toyota sold 10.15 million vehicles in 2015, making it the only carmaker to top 10 million vehicles in the year.
Stocks in Japan and South Korea climbed Wednesday after Iraq’s oil minister hinted that Saudi Arabia and Russia may cooperate to boost oil prices.
An oversaturated U.S. wireless market has led to fierce competition between AT&T, Verizon and smaller rivals Sprint and T-Mobile.
Businesses aren’t doing enough to curb emissions in their supply chains, a report says. But one tech company is trying to buck that trend.
Wang Baoan is the latest high-profile public official to face scrutiny over suspected corruption, casting more doubt on the veracity of the country’s economic data.
The media mogul just sent shares of Weight Watchers soaring again, after tweeting that she has lost 26 pounds.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed nearly 300 points higher Tuesday, in sharp contrast with global indexes.
Since it’s the only major central bank hiking rates, the Federal Reserve has to contend with a stronger U.S. dollar. That could slow its efforts to end years of cheap money.
The world’s largest defense contractor saw growth in selling aircraft, but demand for its missiles and space programs dropped in 2015.
State-run media accuse the billionaire investor of betting against China and Hong Kong's currencies but say he's doomed to fail.
China's statistics bureau says there is no basis for yuan depreciation given China's solid economic fundamentals and reiterates the Chinese government's confidence in the stock market.
The Federal Reserve’s interest-rate-setting committee has projected smooth sailing for the U.S. economy, but markets have not cooperated.
Sales for the healthcare company fell 2.4 percent last quarter, weakened by a stronger U.S. dollar, in its Tuesday earnings report.
The chemicals and seed producer is intensifying its cost cutting in advance of a planned merger with Dow Chemical.
The U.S. insurance giant said Tuesday that it will conduct an IPO of its mortgage-insurance unit and cut costs.
Analysts said a need for cash before Chinese New Year was compounding woes about China’s growth and the strength of the yuan.
The merger of the two Ohio-based lenders will create a company with about $100 billion in assets.
The deal would resolve the bulk of an $8.6B lawsuit accusing Morgan of siphoning billions before Lehman went bankrupt in 2008.
The California maker of electric cars, which recently sued German auto parts maker Hoerbiger, will report fourth-quarter results Feb. 10.
Iraq said its oil output hit a record in December and could be heading higher this year.
A lawyer representing plaintiffs in a suit over ignition switches accuses other attorneys of "poor decisions and mismanagement."
Firms like General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin and Northrup Grumman will report financial results amid numerous challenges.
The Democrat called a planned inversion by Johnson Controls and Tyco “outrageous.”
The retail giant plans to roll out the new policy across its Canadian stores beginning Feb. 9 in British Columbia.
This week and next, the biggest U.S. oil and gas companies are expected to report sharp declines in revenues — and spending cuts for 2016.
Crude oil prices fell as much as 6 percent Monday as Iraq announced record-high oil production that will feed into an oversupplied market.
The job losses, mostly in customer care, include 574 positions at Sprint’s headquarters in Overland Park, Kansas, reports said.
With crude prices tumbling, the industry needs to cut capital expenditures and staff if it hopes to survive, a risk management firm says.
India should expect to pay between $94 million and $108 million for each unit, meaning the deal for just the aircraft could be around $4 billion.