Data released Tuesday shows Denver leading San Francisco in home price increases.
"Get shopping" for bottled water and canned goods, a former member of Prime Minister Gordon Brown's administration advised Britons.
Wang Jianlin, the richest person in Asia and chairman of the Dalian Wanda Group, was the hardest hit, losing $3.6 billion.
A roller-coaster day on the Chinese markets saw stocks slump, rebound and then plunge again, as an injection of more than $23 billion of funds into the market by the Chinese authorities failed to calm market sentiment.
Cheaper oil imports mean local producers find it unviable to invest in new projects, making energy self-sufficiency a tough task.
The injection of liquidity into the market by China has only had a limited impact on jittery investor sentiment.
President Obama on Monday will unveil a series of measures at the National Clean Energy Summit in Las Vegas.
The three major U.S. markets are down by double digits from their past peaks. Relax. They've done that twice since the Great Recession.
Asian nations' ability to cope with China's market meltdown will likely vary, analysts said.
Despite the stock market plunge Monday morning, some investors stuck with their long-term positions, while others pounced on what they saw as an excellent opportunity.
The recent financial market panic can be traced back to China's very real economic slowdown. Here's why it matters around the world.
"Mega-sporting events [like the 2022 Winter Olympics] usually leave the host nation with budget overruns and massive debt," Fidelity Investments said. The Chinese government would beg to differ.
The Chinese e-commerce giant struggled at market's open, tumbling below the initial price of its September 2014 listing.
Ordinarily, Chinese news media have attempted to cast even the most incontrovertibly negative news in a bright light.
For some factory workers, China's devaluation of the yuan may have come too late to save their jobs — at least for the moment.
The stock market took a nosedive last week. How will venture-capital-backed firms like Uber and Snapchat cope?
Last week's massive sell-off may be just a warmup for something far bigger and far more frightening this week.
The People’s Bank of China likely is feeling the pressure to pull on its policy levers because of the country’s economic slowdown and its stock-market crash.
Residents complain the areas are not safe for children to play and that abandoned housing invites the illegal drug trade and other criminal activity, hampering further recovery.
Researchers examine farmers market scene at the American Sociology Association Annual meeting.
The fatalities occurred when a historic military jet crashed into a road near an airport in southeastern England.
Fresh evidence of easing growth in China hammered global stock markets Friday, driving Wall Street to its steepest one-day drop in almost four years.
This explosion tore through a chemical plant in the Chinese province of Shandong Saturday.
The two biggest opposition parties, one of the center-right and the other of the far left, queued up to exercise their constitutional right to spend three days negotiating a new coalition, even though their efforts are almost certain to fail.
Alexis Tsipras has resigned his mandate, but with the opposition in tatters there's no one else to take the reins.
Growing numbers of migrants are arriving in Greece, a country ill-equipped to help because of its own economic struggles. But Greek citizens are stepping in where government is failing.
Preliminary data for August showed factory output at its lowest since 2009, though some economists predict an improvement in coming months.
It remained unclear whether other segments of the Thai economy would be affected by the bombing of a popular shrine.
Fight for 15, the movement for higher pay and workers' rights in low-paying jobs, has expanded its efforts into South America. Here's why.
Toyota says it has to temporarily halt production at second factory because of last week’s industrial accident in Tianjin.