A series of oil sector factors has pushed oil well above $100 per barrel.
The small town of Colcord, Okla. has been invaded by tiny blood worms in their water supply.
The report provides the first look at requests for user data made by governments.
Here are five reasons why the Nintendo 2DS will fail.
The sum funds medical exams, concussion-related compensation and a program of medical research as well as to cover some legal expenses.
Indian banks are expecting a crisis in the coming year as the rupee continues to lose value against the dollar.
Comprehensive U.S. immigration reform may still happen this year, if this bipartisan group has any say about it.
Bharti Airtel and SoftBank have tested new technology to make satellite 3G cost-effective.
Most Western companies have been out of Syria for the past two years.
The economy of the tiny sultanate is doing wonderfully, unlike its larger neighbors in the region.
A new research paper examined the effect on beer prices of a 2008 merger of Coors and Miller breweries.
The largest economy in Latin America may have grown by 0.9 percent in the second quarter.
More people are living alone than ever before, according to a new U.S. Census Bureau report.
With a slew of plug-in vehicles entering the market, the infrastructure to support them is growing even faster.
The governments of Mexico, Colombia, Chile and Peru agreed to a breakthrough in economic relations within Latin America.
Vodafone issued a statement Thursday, ending months of speculation about the potential sale and its exit from the U.S. market.
The U.S. economy grew at a faster-than-expected rate in the April-June period, bolstering the case for the Fed to decrease stimulus.
Abbreviated New Drug Approvals, or ANDA, requests are submitted to FDA for its approval to manufacture and sell a generic drug in the U.S.
Reports out of Taiwan suggests that the Galaxy Note 3 will be available to customers on Sept. 27.
From the staid and storied halls of the world's third-largest bank comes a wild and woolly prediction about gold.
UK and Germany play down the prospect of a U.S.-led strike while several other nations tactically avoid calls for action.
In three and half years, banks have paid around $66 billion in litigation costs, and that number looks to grow.