The closely-watched Fed meeting minutes showed many officials believed it would be premature to hike interest rates in June.
The breach exposed member names, birth dates, email addresses and subscriber numbers.
The data storage equipment maker announced plans to lay off around 500 employees globally to cut costs and focus on cloud-based products.
The tactic that has driven trillions of dollars to shareholders has now come under fire from major pension officials.
Despite a favorable jobs report in April, the central bank seems likely to hold off on raising interest rates until September.
The Dallas carrier warned it expects a key revenue metric to drop this quarter.
A new survey reveals U.S. workers' differing methods of commuting. But the car remains the overwhelming first choice.
U.S. stocks traded mildly lower Wednesday after the Dow hit a record high for a second straight session a day earlier.
A report from the AFL-CIO targets a key argument for the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership.
Stonegate Bank in Florida reportedly welcomed the Cuban government as its newest client, furthering thawing U.S.-Cuba relations.
The USTR's annual report on foreign trade barriers offers a rare glimpse into the agenda of U.S. negotiators.
To boost sales growth, Target cut its year-round shipping rates in half earlier this year, lowering the minimum order to $25 from $50.
Etsy is a market leader in a niche within a broader industry, and there are a lot of ecommerce players that would benefit from that kind of diversification.
JPMorgan and others were penalized a combined $5.7 billion over foreign exchange manipulation. Despite the historic guilty pleas, no individuals were charged.
The Malaysia Airlines plane, which went missing in March 2014, is yet to be found after months of a multi-million dollar search operation.
Lowe's shares fell 7 percent in thin premarket trading on Wednesday.
The European cable company will acquire a controlling stake in Suddenlink Communications, and is reportedly also looking to acquire Time Warner Cable.
UBS said its settlement includes a $203 million penalty for pleading guilty to allegations it rigged Libor benchmark interest rates.
Britain's biggest clothing retailer also sells homewares and upmarket food.
The price rises came after a session on Tuesday that saw oil slide over 3 percent on a dollar rally and concerns of a building glut.
The house in Long Island, New York, where F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote part of his Jazz Age novel, is listed for $3.9 million.
Amazon's CEO named Maria Renz as his technical adviser, a coveted position held by men for more than 15 years.
“PayPal illegally signed up consumers for its online credit product without their permission," the watchdog Consumer Financial Protection Bureau alleged.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi wants to boost federal funding for train safety systems following the deadly Amtrak crash in Philadelphia.
California Gov. Jerry Brown signed an agreement with other states and countries to slash greenhouse gas emissions and tackle global warming, ahead of a UN-led summit in Paris.
Los Angeles becomes the latest city to approve a $15 minimum wage, which is to be in force by 2020.
The rail operator said government delays obstructed its previous efforts to buy bandwidth.
Charities promised donors their money would support treatment. Instead, administrators padded their own pockets.
China banks on alternative-energy vehicles to abate pollution. Next step: Incentives for heavily polluting industries to rein in use of fossil fuels.
Japanese air bag maker Takata says nearly 34 million vehicles across 11 automakers in the U.S. are affected by its air bag bombs.