After agreeing to part with the Financial Times, the U.K. publishing outfit Pearson is negotiating the sale of its stake in the group that produces the Economist.
If the country can’t protect its spies, what right does it have to send them abroad?
Malaysia last month circulated a draft resolution to form the tribunal. Russia last week proposed a rival text that demands justice for the victims of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, but does not establish a tribunal.
Cost, staffing and the turn-off factor to what is supposed to be a fun night out will likely deter movie theater chains from adopting airport-style security.
A lack of opportunities in Africa must be addressed at the Global Entrepreneurship Summit in Kenya to spur the development of entrepreneurship on the continent.
BG Group Plc on Friday confirmed that it has received final unconditional clearance from Brazilian competition authority CADE for its acquisition by bigger rival Royal Dutch Shell.
Petrobras workers Friday laid down their tools to protest the Brazilian energy giant's plans to slash investments and liquidate assets.
Rising sea levels, intense flooding and more severe storms threaten to weaken the value of private investors' holdings, the Economist Intelligence Unit says.
In a speech Friday in New York, the Democratic presidential candidate is expected to call on Wall Street to be more focused on the future.
U.S. stocks were following Asia and Europe into the red on Friday.
The Troika are planning talks on a third bailout in Athens — but what about those people left behind?
Five years and billions of dollars have passed since a ruptured Enbridge Inc. pipeline spilled a million gallons of crude oil into the Kalamazoo River.
Steel and concrete producers aren't thrilled, but some architectural firms and the federal government support building wooden high-rise buildings.
A loophole in U.S. auto safety regulations allows some commercial limos and buses to forgo air bags and seat belts. The results of that technicality have been deadly.
The head of the search effort in Australia expects the operation to be "completed this time next year."
Starbucks saw a 7 percent jump in quarterly sales this period, which was driven by a 4 percent increase in customer visits.
Sandra Bland, like many African-American women, seems to have kept her troubles to herself. Her death in a Texas jail cell July 13 has been ruled a suicide.
The e-commerce company posts a surprise quarterly profit after a long history of sacrificing profits for rapid sales growth.
New Jersey's pension chief says the state's GOP governor is trying to block an audit of payments to Wall Street.
A trio of mixed earnings results from blue-chip stocks send the index into the red for the year.
In a move limited to the fast-food industry, New York will soon become the first state to approve a minimum wage of $15 an hour.
BMW said that it could consider assembling luxury cars in India in the long run, depending on market growth.
Cable and media giant Comcast reported Q2 earnings Thursday, matching EPS estimates and beating revenue.
South Korea's economy grew 0.3 percent in the last three months compared to 0.8 percent in the first three months of the year, recording a six-year low.
Only 53 percent of companies have topped revenue forecasts during earnings season, below the 61 percent average beat rate since 2002.
Kit Harington was spotted on a flight to Belfast, leading to speculation of his return in “Game of Thrones” Season 6.
One of the most divisive provisions of the Dodd-Frank financial reforms, the rule is intended to curb speculative Wall Street risk-taking.
The U.S. House of Representatives is set to vote Wednesday on a bill that would weaken new federal limits on toxic coal ash waste.
Shipments of the flagship iPhone came in below forecasts, sending Apple shares down more than 5 percent.
Brad Pitt has written a moving letter to American retail-giant Costco to stop caging chickens for the production of eggs.