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.
If Monday’s trading activity is any indication, U.S. oil prices are headed to a ninth straight weekly decline.
The day's volatile trading session followed a global stock sell-off across European and Asian markets as investors reacted to heightened fears that China’s economy is sinking fast.
The Shanghai Composite Index fell Monday about 8.5 percent to 3,209.91 points, eliminating all its gains this year.
One investigator said the bank the fund was steered to had reaped more than $2 billion in illegal profits from New York pension fund clients.
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.
European stocks fell sharply at the open on Monday even as the price of crude oil hit its lowest level since 2009, and the euro appreciated to six-month highs.
As Indian markets reacted to global panic over China's economic future, India's central bank governor and finance minister sought to reassure local investors.
Markets around the world plunged to multi-year lows Monday as Chinese stocks suffered their biggest one-day loss since the peak of the global financial crisis.
Australian markets saw their worst single-day losses in years on Monday.
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.
Similar tie-up talks between Sharp and Hon Hai fell through in 2012 after the Japanese company balked at demands that it said would have given the Taiwanese firm too much control.
The price of gold has been under heavy pressure this year due to expectations the U.S. Federal Reserve could raise its interest rates for the first time in almost a decade.
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.
The blue-chip index suffered its ninth-biggest point drop ever Friday, slipping into correction territory for the first time since 2011.
U.S. oil prices are headed for an eighth straight weekly decline, the longest weekly losing streak in nearly 30 years.
The blue-chip index suffered its biggest one-day percentage drop in nearly four years after China offered fresh evidence of a sharper-than-expected economic slowdown.
Preliminary data for August showed factory output at its lowest since 2009, though some economists predict an improvement in coming months.
The losses Thursday were fueled by global growth concerns after the U.S. Federal Reserve hinted that it may wait until the days and months post September to raise interest rates.
After warning investors of slow user growth three weeks ago, Twitter execs Thursday are dealing with another setback -- shares have lost nearly 17 percent of their value.
Losses in financial stocks were fueled by concerns that the Fed may wait until after September to raise interest rates.
GOP presidential candidates Jeb Bush and John Kasich left government for the doomed bank — and got big paychecks as Lehman lost their states’ money.
The move comes at a time when developing countries around the world are devaluing their currencies.
Minutes from the Federal Reserve's meeting last month showed central bankers need more confidence inflation is moving toward their goal.
Muted inflation could prevent the central bank from lifting rates in September.
Two new studies of hedge fund returns suggest the industry's performance claims are significantly inflated.
Oil prices tumbled to six-year lows Wednesday, weighing on the energy sector ahead of the Federal Reserve's latest meeting minutes.
The highest number of children killed themselves on Sept. 1, the day that many schools reopen.