WSJ: India Antitrust Body Fines Cement Firms for Price Fixing
DJN: UPDATE: Rite Aid 1Q Loss Narrows On Improved Same-Store Sales
DJN: Interbank Foreign Exchange Rates At 08:50 EST / 1250 GMT
DJN: U.S. Stock Futures Flat Amid Lackluster Data, Robust Spain Bond Demand...
MW: Indications: Stock futures shake off earlier losses, data ahead
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A bipartisan group of lawmakers called on regulators to overhaul the way initial public offerings are conducted, concerned that the flubbed stock sale by Facebook shows the system unfairly punishes small investors.
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This weekend, 300 or more of the campaign's biggest donors will attend two days of meetings with the candidate and top campaign and policy advisers in Park City, Utah.
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The Spanish government will present later today the results of external assessments of its local banks that will serve as the basis of a request for European Union aid to help finance a cleanup of the sector.
Stock futures straddled the flat line as investors balanced robust demand for a Spanish bond auction with lackluster data on the American labor market.
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Federal Reserve officials extended their efforts to boost the sluggish U.S. economy and said they were ready to do more if necessary to spur job growth.
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Business activity in the euro zone contracted for the fifth straight month in June, increasing the likelihood that the ECB will cut its key interest rate when its governing council next meets.
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A preliminary gauge of Chinese manufacturing activity fell in June, HSBC said. The reading could stoke market concerns of a sharp slowdown.
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The Florida police chief who was strongly criticized for his agency's initial investigation of Trayvon Martin's slaying was fired Wednesday, city officials said.
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Across Asia, brokers are pushing to sell complex products to the region's expanding ranks of investors, especially wealthy ones. But some regulators are sounding a note of caution.
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Israel is unlikely to launch a strike on Iran as long as sanctions on Tehran intensify and diplomatic efforts continue, despite the failure of international talks in Moscow this week, Israeli officials and security experts said.
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The BCS commissioners reached a consensus on a model four-team seeded playoff that will be presented to the university presidents next week for approval.
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The battle of the euro zone will be waged on a playing field in Poland on Friday, when Germany meets Greece in soccer's European Championship.
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This year's fashions offer stylish solutions to the problem of how to dress for the office amid hot weather and cold air conditioning.
Since 2005, the airport in Bangor, Maine, has handled 647 diverted flights—bomb scares, mechanical issues and sick passengers—and is prepared for almost any emergency.
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Microsoft's overhaul of its smartphone operating system set for launch this autumn will change the basic software so extensively that won't be able to run on Nokia's new line of Lumia handsets.
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The growth of cloud computing, a proliferation of mobile devices in the office and the ever-blurring line between personal and business computing are compelling Citrix to look further ahead than before.
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European stocks fell as data suggested global growth is stalling. After the Fed lowered its forecasts for GDP, China's purchasing managers' index data also disappointed.
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Analysts say the health care sector is rife with opportunities, regardless of what happens to the reform law in the courts.
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The House on Wednesday passed a bill to let the Food and Drug Administration collect about $6 billion in user fees from medical companies to help fund the agency.
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Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda won the backing of the main opposition parties for a contentious bill to double the sales tax. But their support means a possible ruling-party split led by Mr. Noda's biggest rival.
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Brady Dougan, long lauded for safely steering Credit Suisse Group through the financial crisis, finds himself under mounting pressure over the bank's recent performance.
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Hundreds of thousands of small businesses are excluded from claiming a health-care tax credit, and many blame overly narrow restrictions.
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Like other big art events, the Sydney Biennale started with the goal of fostering international dialogue. That message is doubly important in a faraway place like Australia, its chairman says.
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Obama invokes the arguments of the Bush Justice Department.
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New York City sweltered through a record-breaking start to summer, and the heat was expected to continue searing the city through Thursday evening.
Soccer traditionalists love to disparage the penalty kick. But three-and-a-half decades after penalty kicks became a staple of elimination matches, there's a growing group of devotees who view shootouts as the sport's essence.
Managers are fighting an epidemic of grammar gaffes in the workplace, where looseness with language can create bad impressions with clients, ruin marketing materials and cause communications errors.
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This Colonial-style home in a tree-lined suburb of Washington, D.C. was the home of one of former President Lyndon B. Johnson's political confidants.
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In one of the first attempts to preserve some of his administration's policies after he leaves office, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg plans to establish a new office to help businesses, especially smaller ones, navigate city bureaucracy.
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Tourists are flocking to the Japanese dock that washed up on an Oregon beach this month.
In today's pictures, a car sits in a sinkhole in Minnesota, pigs fall out of a truck in an accident in China, an art installation in Washington highlights the student dropout rate, and more.
As the Euro 2012 soccer competition begins its quarterfinal rounds Thursday, fans from Spain, Portugal, Greece and other countries struggling in the regional debt crisis are finding reasons to smile.