Toyota said it would recall 185,000 vehicles across 19 models including the Corolla and Alphard in Japan, and 5,000 in China.
Tax experts cautioned however that the move would be difficult to enforce unilaterally.
The pay package, which drew lukewarm approval from shareholders, puts Nadella among the highest paid CEOs in the U.S.
About 40,000 airport workers and thousands of fast-food employees plan a nationwide protest of low wages Thursday and Friday.
Jackson called on CEO Satya Nadella to commit to diversity efforts during a Q-and-A session at the company's annual meeting.
The U.S. EPA says it is on track to finalize the rule before Obama leaves office in 2016.
The U.S. auto industry is now 1.1 million new-vehicle sales away from recovering to pre-recession levels. And 2015 could be even better.
Honda Motor Co. has expanded a recall of vehicles equipped with potentially faulty driver-side Takata brand air bags.
The teen retailer has struggled in recent years and plans to phase out its logo from its clothing to improve sales.
In Young v. UPS, the Supreme Court will review the Pregnancy Discrimination Act. The decision could have far-reaching financial consequences.
The accident, in Ukraine's largest nuclear power plant, could reportedly aggravate the power crisis in the country.
The airline made the announcement during a briefing with families of Flight MH370's passengers and crew, The Malaysian Insider reported.
Takata has refused to accede to the NHTSA's demand even as automakers plan to initiate a joint inquiry into the company's air bags.
Big auto sales numbers last month -- the best in more than a decade -- helped the blue chip stock index set two records.
A roundup of 10 original gift ideas under $50 to buy for dad this holiday season.
Black Friday deals pushed November car sales in the U.S. to highest level in more than a decade.
Christie’s CEO Steven Murphy announced Tuesday he will step down as CEO of the auction house, less than three weeks after rival Sotheby’s announced a search for a new top executive.
All public buildings in downtown Detroit are without power, forcing early school dismissals and postponement of a criminal trial.
Pressure from Turkey and the threat of the Islamic State group helped bring the two parties together.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has outlined exactly when, how and why big companies are bribing people.
Analysts said the cost savings from the combination were higher than expected but would take several years to be achieved.
Plaintiffs are seeking about $350 million in damages, which would be automatically tripled under antitrust laws.
Cypress Semiconductor Corp. and Spansion announced on Monday the two companies have agreed to merge in an all-stock transaction, valued at $4 billion.
First it was an electrical short problem in the automatic windows switch; now it’s a problem with the headlamps.
It potentially replaces the yellow cab, private car, mass transit and car rentals.
People are back to work but still shopping on their phones.
An early survey found Thanksgiving weekend sales fell 11 percent from last year, but experts say they're upbeat about holiday spending overall.
In the first 12 hours of Cyber Monday, online sales grew 9 percent from last year.
There is serious money at stake: Up to 400,000 barrels of Iraqi oil remains off the market until the issue is solved.
A new report shows Wall Street-savvy hackers are using Microsoft computing language to target pharmaceutical companies to game the markets.