Top US diplomat John Kerry will fly to Brussels and London on Monday for talks with Washington's key allies in the aftermath of Britain's vote to leave the European Union.
Britain will get a Norway-type deal to keep close economic ties with the European Union but will have no say on decision-making in the bloc after "Brexit" materializes, Finland's former prime minister Alexander Stubb said on Sunday.
The future of opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn looked shaky on Sunday after seven members of his top team quit and others seemed set to follow over his handling of Britain's EU referendum.
A tsunami of uncertainty has engulfed Anna Woydyla, a Polish restaurant worker in London, since Britain voted to leave the European Union.
The Chinese stock market held up better than other major markets on Friday as the unexpected British vote to leave the European Union - called Brexit - sent the global equities and currency markets into wild turbulence.
With the Britain's divorce from the European Union confirmed on Friday, prominent Hong Kong-listed banks and companies with heavy business exposure to the United Kingdom were battered by a hefty fall in the stock market.
The pain of Britain's European Union divorce radiated around the globe on Friday, blowing up a storm in the financial markets that may take time to die down and retarding prospects for a recovery in world trade.
Business leaders are keenly waiting to hear key policymakers' thoughts on their economic strategies, as well as their views on how to better recognize and adjust to the challenges posed by new technologies, in the Summer Davos Forum.
China Vanke Co, the developer whose $6.9 billion stock sale to a Shenzhen subway operator has drawn opposition from its two major shareholders, said completing the deal is a "life-or-death" matter as it seeks new ways to expand amid surging land costs.
Large and medium-sized iron and steel companies in China turned a profit in the first four months of this year, according to the China Iron and Steel Association.
Qualcomm Inc, the biggest mobile phone chipmaker, is filing a lawsuit in Beijing against a Chinese phone maker, the first major test of a hard-won agreement with the Chinese government to allow it to enforce its right to charge fees for the use of its technology.
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