Prospects of an interest rate hike by the U.S. Federal Reserve in September has made world markets jittery.
TV reports showed a journalist 'confessing' to causing stock market volatility. A regulatory official was accused of taking bribes and insider trading.
Hundreds of residents had protested demanding compensation in the wake of the blasts that killed at least 150 people at a hazardous chemicals warehouse earlier in August.
Concerns about an interest rate hike by the U.S. Federal Reserve led Asian markets to open the week lower, with sharp falls in China.
The U.S. Federal Reserve may not let volatility in Chinese markets put off a rate hike, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Investors also brace for economic data coming from China on Tuesday.
Police officers and a 12-year-old boy are among the latest casualties in a conflict that has claimed over 40,000 lives.
New Hampshire voters brought the proposal to his attention, the Republican presidential candidate said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Three people who walked into a police station after one victim was knifed to death and three others were wounded by gunfire were arrested on suspicion of involvement.
Eni predicted the find could help meet Egypt's gas needs for decades to come.
"I saw at least 30 ambulances and three helicopters. The smoke was very heavy," says a witness close to the blaze at Saudi Aramco's apartment complex in the city of Khobar.
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang argues that market-stabilization measures taken by the country's government have been effective.
The Fed's second-in-command said in a speech at the Jackson Hole Symposium that central bankers are more interested in where the U.S. economy is going than where it's been.
Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said on Saturday that inflation was likely to rebound allowing the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates.
The 57.98 million-share, or roughly 10.8 percent, stake was revealed in a Friday night filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
On Saturday a Yellen ally and former adviser at the Fed delivered a provocative retort
The owner of adultery website Ashley Madison had already been struggling to sell itself or raise funds for at least three years before the publication of details about its members.
Tesla reportedly wants the Obama administration to pressure the Chinese president to lift restrictions on the operations of U.S. automakers in his country.
German oceanographic experts have said that ocean current modeling leads them to believe that the search area in the southern Indian Ocean could be thousands of miles off-target.
China’s slowing economy will have a profound impact on automakers who have come to rely on the country's unsustainable growth.
Despite showing large gains for women and Hispanics, Twitter managed to hire just 16 African-Americans since its last diversity report.
More than 10,000 miles away, Chilean copper mine workers are struggling from the effects of China's economic downturn.
The Hurricane Katrina-ravaged city will "rise again," the ex-president promised in 2006, but it still suffers from high unemployment and racial disparities.
Growth continued for a 10th straight quarter, but market volatility -- thanks mostly to China's meltdown -- could end the streak.
China's sell-off wasn't "so radical" that the Fed should delay its plans, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said.
Consumer spending is one of the most important elements of the country’s economy, which has been hit hard by rising interest rates and China's economic slowdown.
U.S. stocks opened lower Friday after surging a day earlier on China’s announcement of new stimulus measures to check its rapidly cooling economy.
The Erawan shrine bombing that killed 20 isn't expected to overly affect tourism, either, a Thai official said Friday.
Foreigners will no longer be restricted to one property in China, as the country seeks to boost the slowing real estate sector, seen as key to the economy.