Warnings of weaker profits and a possible pullback in the Fed's stimulus program helped pull the stock market down Tuesday, despite some positive economic news.
For the second day in a row, a major U.S. newspaper has been sold. This time, it's the Washington Post, which has been bought by Amazon.com CEO Jeff Bezos for $250 million.
In a shocking move, the tech CEO bought one of the country's biggest newspapers for $250 million.
With little new economic data to trade on, U.S. stocks lost a bit of ground in quiet trading Monday on Wall Street.
J.C. Penney hires an executive from the food world to reconnect with its shoppers.
The Obama Administration hands a victory to Apple in its long-running patent dispute with Samsung.
Goldman, other warehouse owners and the London Metal Exchange have been named as defendants in the lawsuit filed last week alleging anticompetitive behavior.
The Obama administration has overturned a U.S. trade panel's ban on the sale of some older iPhones and iPads, reversing a ruling that had favored Samsung Electronics.
CBS and Time Warner Cable can't work out their differences, so they want the 3 million viewers affected by the spat to help settle the fee fight.
From a new movie with soaring expectations to an earnings report whipped up by smoothie chain Jamba, here are some of the items that will shape the week ahead on Wall Street.
Stocks spent the day regaining morning losses and ended Friday's session slightly higher, with both the Dow and the Standard & Poor's 500 index setting fresh closing...
A special committee of Dell's board has agreed to an increased offer from founder Michael Dell that would add a special dividend for shareholders.
Dell shareholders are to vote on proposal by founder Michael Dell to take the ailing PC-maker private, but the deal faces big hurdles.
From Microsoft having to rebrand its cloud service to KFC trying to fly up-market, here's a rundown of this week's best and worst results from the business world.
U.S. stocks jumped Thursday, pushing the S&P 500 above 1,700 for the first time, as data suggested the economy is still improving. The S&P and the Dow closed at...
A former Goldman Sachs trader who earned the nickname "Fabulous Fab" was found liable in a fraud case brought by federal regulators in response to the 2007 mortgage crisis.
General Motors, Ford and Chrysler all reported disappointing U.S. auto sales in July, hurt by low inventory of some popular car models.
Stocks are set to rally Thursday morning, but August has proven to be a fickle month for investors.
J.C. Penney says that CIT, the largest lender in the clothing industry, is still supporting deliveries from its suppliers.