The world's largest website registrar could be valued at more than $3 billion.
The deal brings to a close an auction process that was marred by accusations that Standard General used "machinations and manipulation."
Web hosting company GoDaddy Inc. has priced its initial public offering at $20 per share, above its previously indicated $17 to $19 per share range, valuing it at around $4.5 billion, including debt, according to underwriting sources.
Etsy's IPO could value the Brooklyn-based e-commerce platform at $1.78 billion.
Investors ended a choppy trading session on the last day of 2015's first quarter as losses Tuesday pushed the blue-chip index into negative territory for the year.
The euro is on track for its biggest quarterly drop since its 1999 inception as Greek debt crisis continues.
U.S. stocks traded lower Monday despite data that revealed U.S. consumer confidence rebounded this month.
Gov. Christie’s administration, criticized for the skyrocketing fees that New Jersey has paid private firms to manage the state’s billions of dollars of pension investments, tried a novel way to defend itself this week.
On Monday, China's central bank announced measures to spur China’s sagging property market.
Activity in the health care space helped spur a major rally Monday, with the Nasdaq jumping more than 1 percent.
Tesla’s stock price gained 3 percent after the company’s renowned CEO tweeted a "major" announcement about an upcoming product line.
The country's bailout crisis is creeping back into the spotlight. It could face bankruptcy in just a few weeks.
Lynn Tilton, head of the private equity firm Patriarch Partners, has been accused of defrauding investors.
Much of the focus this week will be on the U.S. nonfarm payrolls report for March and the Greek debt negotiations.
North Korea couldn't meet the basic requirements to join the increasingly popular bank being set up to fund infrastructure projects in Asia.
Chinese stocks surged to seven-year highs, helped by Beijing's unveiling of an ambitious plan to build a modern Silk Road.
Private equity investors prefer their money to be deployed quickly, assuming it's invested wisely.
A Singapore-based brokerage firm expects oil prices to fall further in the second quarter.
Like the U.K., Switzerland and other European countries, Russia has announced it intends to join the bank.
U.S. stocks traded flat Friday after the U.S. economy grew more slowly than expected at the end of 2014.
Crude oil prices were lower due to the dollar's bounce and as investors reassessed the potential impact of the escalating conflict in Yemen.
IndiGo has remained profitable in the last two years, avoiding much of the turbulence to hit rival Indian carriers.
The New York Federal Reserve officials tasked with prying interest rates off the floor have been meeting with bankers and traders to plot how best to do it, amid deep uncertainty over how much control they will really have over short-term lending markets.
A leading bank analyst published a note backing a shareholder proposal to have the megabank consider splitting itself up.
The S&P 500 joined the blue chip index and turned red for the year as economists look ahead to Friday's final revision of U.S. GDP.
Airline stocks took a hit Thursday in the midst of reports the Airbus A320's co-pilot Andreas Lubitz deliberately crashed the plane.
High-frequency traders could come under new SEC rules, but experts doubt they'd have any significant effect on the complex market.
Tensions in the Middle East escalated overnight, triggering fears over crude oil supply.
The CFPB unveiled a plan to make high-cost personal loans more affordable.
A Chinese official said China has "the last one kilometer" to go before achieving full yuan convertibility.