EARTHQUAKE

Tropical Storm Emily

Emily breaks up over Haiti, still threatens rains

Tropical Storm Emily broke apart over the mountains of Haiti and Dominican Republic on Thursday but its remnants still packed rains threatening flash floods and mudslides in the neighboring Caribbean countries.
Residents sit at the malecon as Tropical Storm Emily arrives to Santo Domingo

Haiti Braces for Tropical Storm Emily

According to reports, more than 600,000 homeless Haitians ? driven out of their residences by last year?s devastating earthquake -- are in makeshift camps ahead of Emily?s arrival.
More news
Tropical Storm Emily

Tropical Storm Emily to Make Direct Hit on Haiti, Florida Possibly in its Path

As of 8 a.m. on Wednesday, Emily was located at about 145 miles southeast of Santo Domingo, the capital of the Dominican Republic with maximum sustained winds of 50 miles per hour, or 85 kilometers per hour. Emily is still on a westward movement at a speed of 14 miles per hour, according to the National Weather Service.
IBTimes Logo

Japan signals in contact with U.S., Europe on strong yen

Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda signalled on Tuesday that Tokyo is in close touch with European and U.S. counterparts on the yen's strength, but declined to say if it would sell the yen to rein in its surge in value.
Robot Japan

Robot Seals Help Elderly After Fukushima

At the Suisyoen retirement home 30 km (19 miles) south of the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, elderly Japanese earthquake survivors are finding comfort in a plush, white robot.
House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio

Debt Deal Offers Only Small Blessings For Economy

The tentative deal to avoid a crushing debt default is at best a mild relief for the U.S. economy that nearly stalled in the first half of the year and has yet to show signs of any realistic pickup.
A woman walks past a banner with the logo of Juniper Networks Inc. covering the facade of the New York Stock Exchange 29/10/2009

Juniper tumbles as it catches Cisco "flu"

Investors punished Juniper Networks (JNPR.N) by selling its shares after the networking equipment maker joined Cisco Systems Inc (CSCO.O) in warning that this year's results will miss Wall Street projections.
File photo of Japanese 10,000 yen notes and $100 dollar notes at the main office of the Korea Exchange Bank in Seoul

Japan Mulling FX Intervention

Japanese authorities know there is not much they can do to turn a broad weak-dollar tide so will judge any intervention a success if it keeps speculative action from driving up the yen too far and too fast.
Washers and dryers are seen on display at a store in New York

June Durable Goods Orders Fall on Transportation

New orders for long-lasting U.S. manufactured goods fell in June and a gauge of business spending plans slipped, supporting views that the economy will not emerge quickly from its current soft patch.
A worker welds Toshiba Corp's Shielded Ion Exchange Module for a radioactive water treatment facility at the Keihin Product Operations in Yokohama

Japan nuclear compensation bill passes key hurdle

A lower house committee of Japan's parliament on Tuesday passed a bill to help Tokyo Electric Power pay billions of dollars in compensation to those hurt by the Fukushima nuclear disaster, ensuring a law will soon be in place to guarantee the utility's survival and get aid to victims.
Travelers Ready to Tour Japan amid Disaster Woes

Travelers Ready to Tour Japan Amid Disaster Woes

Tourists worldwide are showing support for the Japanese tourism industry, following the recent natural disasters that saw earthquake and tsunami devastating country?s coastal areas in March.
Nissan says aims to nearly double China sales by 2015

Nissan says aims to nearly double China sales by 2015

Nissan Motor , the largest Asian automaker in China, plans to nearly double its annual sales in the country to 2.3 million vehicles by the end of 2015, the company said on Tuesday, as it accelerates its expansion in the world's largest auto market.
IBTimes Logo

Japan repeats warning on yen rise as calls for action grow

Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda kept up his warning to markets against pushing up the yen too much, saying that he was aware of demands from the business sector for authorities to act against yen rises that hurt the export-reliant economy.
IBTimes Logo

Asia shares up, investors calm on US debt deadlock

Asian shares edged higher on Tuesday, bouncing back from a slide the previous day, after U.S. stocks posted only modest losses in reaction to the worsening deadlock in Washington over raising the debt limit and avoiding a technical bond default.
IBTimes Logo

TI forecasts modest third quarter

Texas Instruments Inc gave a lukewarm outlook for the current quarter, suggesting that back-to-school sales of computers and other consumer electronics would be weaker than normal.
The Science of Volcano Eruptions

Alaska Volcano May Erupt Soon

Is Alaska's Cleveland Volcano ready to erupt? Recent satellite images from the remote volcano suggest it might be, scientists say.
Factory in Japan

Elusive Rebound Better Come Soon

American consumers, faced with grim job prospects and the looming threat of a national debt default, are in no position to support the global economy with a new wave of spending.

Pages

IBT Spotlight

We Help Businesses Find B2B Service Providers They Can Trust.