Industrial production data from the UK beat forecasts while the 17-nation euro zone bloc saw a decline in retail sales.
In just over a decade, New York City has become markedly more pedestrian-friendly, and the stats back that up.
Key question: Can Twitter leverage its user base into above-average demand for its shares?
Prepare to be disappointed by the October jobs report, as well as the first reading for Q3 U.S. GDP.
As the effects of the 2008 global financial crisis fade, an OECD report charts happiness levels from the period.
Apple has been successful in its strategy to prioritize China as one of the initial launch countries for its new iPhones, a new report said.
Growth continued in October for the fourth straight month, but employment fell except in Ireland and France.
Quarterly results could once again provide direction to markets ahead of Thursday’s GDP and jobless claims data.
A record $22 million were raised against the initiative, which would have made the state the first in the U.S. to enact such a law.
A referendum on hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, seemed to deliver mixed results on the issue across communities in Colorado and Ohio.
Reports suggest Sony and Samsung’s LSI division have been competing to be a supplier of the 16-megapixel camera modules for the Galaxy S5.
The three-way deal between Boeing, state lawmakers and the main workers’ union is key to securing the future of the region’s aerospace industry.
Apple's report, published for the first time, shows requests made by the U.S. government for user-account information dominate the list.
Microsoft is narrowing its search for a successor to CEO Steve Ballmer.
Tesla Motors Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA) and Twenty-First Century Fox, Inc. (NASDAQ: FOXA) reported quarterly earnings after the bell on Tuesday.
A Canadian school’s new “no touching” policy, which bans its kindergartners from playing tag or holding hands, angered parents who said the “zero tolerance policy” goes too far.
A humanitarian disaster is avoided after a court tells Barclays it must continue to transfer money to Somalia despite terrorism fears.
Using general accounting principles -- Tesla lost $38.5M in the quarter or 32 cents per share, worse than expected.
Goldman's top economist says it looks like Fed data favors lingering low rates.
Foreign companies doing business in China are hoping the upcoming Party Congress will indicate a better year for them than the previous one.
Japan opened its largest solar plant on Monday as the national energy policy shifts away from nuclear.
Pimco's Total Return Fund lost billions this year thanks to the Federal Reserve's decision to taper bond buying.
“Beaten-down” mining stocks are likely to remain unattractive until gold prices rise, which could take months or years.
Latin America is one of the fastest-growing regions in the world. Still, skilled workers are looking for opportunities overseas.
A joint venture formed by Japanese companies will begin developing roads and other infrastructure for the Myanmar Thilawa SEZ.
European Union, IMF and ECB officials are assessing Greece's budget, which Athens says has a smaller deficit than the Troika expects.
Tesla Motors is one step closer to testing the waters of wealthy Chinese embrace of its electric luxury cars.
The Spanish telecom company looks to reduce its debt by selling off a major percentage of its Czech unit.
Egypt's output index has risen above the 50 mark, the demarcation point between expansion and contraction.
After five years of misery, European banks are getting back in shape by shedding trillions in assets.