Europe’s political establishment breathed a sigh of relief Monday when postal ballots swung the Austrian election away from a far-right candidate.
Russia has deployed military divisions along its western border as one part of measures to respond to NATO’s buildup.
The move, part of a $1 billion cost-cutting exercise being undertaken by the telecom network equipment maker, was revealed by a Finnish trade union representative.
Eurozone countries are expected to approve the loans, but Athens is unlikely to get debt relief because of the bloc’s differences with the International Monetary Fund.
Growth in domestic demand, especially fixed capital formation and consumption expenditure of households, contributed to growth.
Global stock markets edged lower while short-dated U.S. Treasury yields held near two-month highs on Monday.
Alexander van der Bellen barely defeated Norbert Hofer for the presidency in an election viewed with anxiety across Europe.
Considering the celebrity chef’s past criticism of President Barack Obama, Monday night’s dinner conversation was probably a thing to behold.
Allegations of emissions cheating come several months after a similar scandal broke at Volkswagen.
The German drugmaker made its offer for the Missouri agribusiness May 10 and announced details of the all-cash deal Monday.
Recent comments from Federal Reserve officials have convinced many analysts and investors that a rate hike in June or July is a real possibility.
Athens hopes the measures will help it unlock funds it needs to pay IMF loans and ECB bonds maturing in July.
Hillary Clinton says she definitely will be the Democratic presidential nominee and called on Bernie Sanders to help unite the party.
Global markets and policymakers can largely only wait and see what Britons will say at the polls June 23.
The United States issued a fresh warning to Japan against competitive currency devaluation Saturday, exposing a rift on exchange rate policy.
Still facing fallout over its emissions cheating fraud, the German auto giant says it negotiated a deal with a major labor union.
Norbert Hofer, who could be elected Sunday, shares political views similar to U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.
Next week's gathering in Japan is expected to yield a “go your own way” response from member nations on economic growth strategies.
A brief look at incidents similar to the events playing out Thursday with EgyptAir Flight 804.
The people of China, Germany and the U.K. are the most welcoming to refugees, while Russians, Indonesians and Thais are the least, a survey finds.
But U.S. insistence on renegotiation could unravel the 195-nation Paris Agreement compromise to curb greenhouse gas emissions.
More than 1 million people sought asylum in Germany in 2015, and the majority of them are Muslim.