The top U.S. auto safety regulator said that replacement parts for potentially defective Takata Corp air bag inflators may not offer consumers a remedy that lasts the life of the car.
Wall Street is looking ahead to Wednesday's economic calendar, which includes a report on private sector job creation.
The seasonally adjusted annualized rate, a key sales metric, was the highest since 2006 last month.
Challenging White House claims on the TPP, protesters showed it's not so easy to just "walk over" and "read the text."
The overturning of the Eastern Star cruise ship raised safety concerns as China develops its domestic tourism industry.
Ford Motor said sales dropped waiting for its Kansas City factory to get up to speed on aluminum-body F-150 production.
Big banks, once dominant in the home loan market, have given way to the so-called shadow banking sector, which faces fewer regulations.
U.S. stocks pared losses and traded higher Tuesday as tensions subsided over Greece's ongoing debt crisis.
Scientists and economists this week proposed a Global Apollo Program to drive down costs of renewable energy and make it cheaper than fossil fuels.
Apple's App Store refuses to download apps for many users, but the company's systems indicate everything is running smoothly.
A report Tuesday found countries and global financial institutions are backing billions in coal power plants and mines, despite calls to cut climate-change emissions.
Americans’ increasing appetite for trucks and SUVs boosted the Detroit automakers’ numbers last month.
Stocks to watch Tuesday include tech giant Apple Inc. and Japanese auto parts manufacturer Takata Corp.
Major food and pharmaceutical companies are gathered at a summit in Washington on Tuesday, where the Obama administration is announcing voluntary cuts to the widespread use of antibiotics.
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles says its U.S. sales topped 200,000 last month for the first time since March 2007.
Samsung's Galaxy S6 is having a better launch than last year's models in terms of sales.
The grounding was temporary and due to an unspecified glitch. Flights are back on schedule.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, firebrand critic of Wall Street, is assailing the "extremely disappointing" tenure of SEC Chair Mary Jo White.
Washington's concerned about the way Fiat Chrysler Automobiles has handled -- or not handled -- 20 recalls covering 10 million vehicles.
Washington and Oregon voters put pot regulation under the oversight of liquor control agencies, despite their lack of expertise.
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 went missing last March, with 239 people on board, and no trace of the plane has been found yet.
A March ruling had concluded that Silicon Valley venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers did not discriminate against executive Ellen Pao.
The reduction showed policy makers recognized the need to put the economy on a more solid footing.
The agency slammed experts calling for a review into the way search operation for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane is being conducted.
The #MyNameIs campaign was attended by protesters from the LGBT community, Native Americans and survivors of domestic violence.
A Canadian court ordered three tobacco companies to pay $12 billion to smokers in Quebec.
An estimated 10,000 to 20,000 jobs will be axed, Sky News said, citing unidentified sources.
Among those on board the ship were 406 tourists, aged from around 50 to 80, on a tour organized by a Shanghai tour group, and 47 crew members.
Takata Corp. said on Monday that it will continue producing air bags that use ammonium nitrate propellant, but will change the design of the driver-side air bag inflators.
In Texas, the combination of rainfall and storm surges that accompany hurricanes could further flood rivers and bayous.