Four giants of global banking agreed on Wednesday to pay more than $5 billion in fines to regulators and plead guilty to manipulating the global currency market.
For an increasing number of Indonesians, rice and noodles are no longer at the top of the menu. Bread is becoming a new food staple.
SABMiller Plc must be hoping that Australians like its debt as much as its beer.
Industrial restructuring, growth in services good indicators of improving conditions, say experts
China vowed on Wednesday to invest hundreds of billions of yuan in the coming years to increase Internet speed and expand broadband access in rural regions.
Hanergy Thin Film Power Group Ltd, the Chinese solar equipment maker controlled by Li Hejun, suspended trading in Hong Kong after the stock plummeted 47 percent in morning trading.
Shanghai will start an online car-hailing services platform soon, the first city in China to legalize car-hailing smartphone applications via an official public services function.
Small-cap stocks may be the champions of the equity market rally on the Chinese mainland, but foreign investors are playing it safe with a focus on bigger, better-known issues.
Japan's economy grew at a faster-than-expected 2.4 percent annual pace in the January-March quarter, suggesting a recovery is gaining traction despite persisting weakness in corporate and household spending.
The US housing market has given a sudden jolt to what appeared to be a slumping economy.
A busy spring pushed Home Depot's first-quarter profit and revenue above Wall Street expectations and the home improvement retailer raised its projections for both in 2015.
Nowhere, perhaps, is the turmoil at Standard Chartered Plc more evident than in the Middle East, as an exodus of top managers and exits from regional businesses threaten to undermine the bank's top five position in debt capital markets.
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