Tropical Storm Bill has led to several Spirit Airlines flights being canceled or delayed, leaving passengers stranded for as many as two days.
U.S. stocks rallied Thursday as the Federal Reserve’s cautious approach to raising interest rates offset concerns about Greece.
U.S. officials charged doctors, nurses and other medical professionals with billing the government program for items they didn’t use or need.
Boosting job-training programs with tax credits is a solid idea, economists say -- as long as there's proper oversight.
The U.S. began requiring baby seat anchors in 2002, but today most cars don’t make baby seats easy to secure.
New York's search for a bank regulator to replace the departing Benjamin Lawsky has drawn the interest of Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who advocates choosing someone with at least as much bite as Lawsky.
The Nasdaq composite soared Thursday to a new record, driven by the biotechnology sector.
American families welcomed nearly 4 million babies in 2014 – the most of any year since the recession began in 2007.
The measure, widely seen as essential to approval of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, now heads to the Senate.
Filming on the fifth installment, "Dead Men Tell No Tales," continues in Australia.
While Apple is keeping quiet about sales numbers, research firm Slice Intelligence has its own estimate.
Crude oil powers the state when prices are high, but the boom-and-bust nature of the oil business makes it risky to hinge an economy on.
Among other deals, Airbus received an order for 110 planes from Hungarian low-cost carrier Wizz Air.
The maker of wearable health-tracking devices will make its stock market debut Thursday with an IPO that could value the company at more than $4 billion.
Currently, Qantas Airways flight from Sydney to Dallas Fort Worth with the Airbus A-380 jumbo is the longest non-stop flight to the U.S.
The Orkim Harmony was hijacked earlier in June with about 50,000 barrels of gasoline onboard.
Descendant Douglas Hamilton said he could not “think of another individual” who made a larger contribution to the United States.
The Australian Transport Safety Bureau confirmed that the GO Phoenix, and onboard experts and equipment, contracted by Malaysia are being pulled out.
GM's board rebuffed a merger proposal from the Italian-American carmaker earlier this year.
Greece is headed for a showdown with its creditors Thursday that may result in a debt default and an exit from the euro.
The U.S. Federal Reserve provided a few clues about when policy makers plan to lift rates for the first time in nearly a decade.
Reports are circulating that BMW’s alliance with Toyota will produce the automaker's first hydrogen fuel cell car by 2020.
Sand Hill Exchange, which hoped to challenge Wall Street by helping users invest in startups, met its match with financial regulators.
Palm oil, made by pulping the fruit of oil palms, is in everything from ice cream to cosmetics. But some are calling the ingredient, key to Nutella's creamy texture, a scourge on the world's forests.
The Fed signaled it could begin returning interest rates to normal levels this year, marking the first rate hike in nearly a decade.
Sounding the alarm over instability in the bond market, major banks are asking to roll back rules that make markets more transparent.
A stairway leading up to Utah Valley University's new Student and Wellness Center includes three separate lanes for walking, running and texting.
Market professionals are awaiting a speech from U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen Wednesday that will reveal the overall health of the economy.
As China’s economy cools, consumers steer clear of auto purchases, preferring to sink their yuan into the booming stock market.
The court rejected the company's argument that it is not a traditional employer and merely provides a technological platform to drivers and passengers.