European leaders embark on talks Thursday over steps they hope will begin to lift doubts about the survival of the euro, amid heavy skepticism in financial markets.
Chinese savers increasingly are turning funds away from traditional deposits toward higher-return wealth-management products, a trend that is posing new risks for the country's banking system.
You'll never be a member of the "Innard" Circle if the likes of brains in black butter, Uzbek boiled spleen or Fujianese pig heart make you squirm.
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Xstrata and Glencore agreed to revise a key element of their merger, shifting the focus to whether Glencore is willing to sweeten the price to quell a shareholder rebellion over the terms.
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Apple launched its iTunes online media store in Hong Kong, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines and eight other Asian markets, making it easier for customers in the region to buy and download music and videos.
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Google unveiled a new tablet computer called the Nexus 7 that will challenge Amazon.com's popular Kindle Fire tablet in price at $199.
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Wall Street gave Facebook a lukewarm reception, with some research analysts raving about the stock's prospects but others offering less-enthusiastic assessments.
Here are the top business stories from today's Wall Street Journal Asia.
A spat between China and Vietnam over energy rights in the South China Sea intensified as Vietnam's biggest company called on China to scrap its plans to develop areas near the Vietnamese shore.
A woman at the center of a firestorm over China's one-child policy said she was being kept in the hospital against her will and that her husband has disappeared.
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China's central Henan province appears to have beaten a hasty retreat on a proposal to ease housing-market curbs, illustrating continued tensions between Beijing and local governments over property policies.
The prime minister warned Spain can't finance itself at current prices for long, and said he would push for a banking and fiscal union.
Supporters of the Free Syrian Army have established an outreach office in Washington for a lobbying effort that is likely to feed the Obama administration's discussions on whether to arm the group or more directly intervene in the Syrian conflict.
When Manmohan Singh was last finance minister of India, in the early 1990s, he helped rescue the country from a severe financial crisis. Now, with the nation once again facing an economic crunch, he has an opportunity to show he can do it again.
An Egyptian court reversed a government decision allowing military police and intelligence to arrest civilians, a setback for the country's military rulers.
Some secular Egyptians worried about what conservative Islamist Mohammed Morsi's presidency could mean for their way of life are responding to his election in creative ways.
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Obama has managed to retain a narrow lead in his race for re-election despite a spate of bad economic news and surging GOP optimism about Romney's prospects, a new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll finds.
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A federal appeals court upheld the EPA's first-ever rules limiting carbon-dioxide emissions, a major victory for the Obama administration.
Production of coca, the ingredient in cocaine, is rising rapidly in the lower Amazon region amid big changes in the global cocaine business.
A decadelong expansion of the world's developing economies has come with an unwanted side-effect: Rising consumption of cocaine and other illegal drugs.
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At some point, discussions about the quality of higher education in the U.S. come around to the subject of tenure. And the disagreement could hardly be more stark.
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