Apple regained some momentum in its fourth quarter, selling more iPhones than expected while triggering some concerns about the iPad.
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Telefonica, one of the world's most indebted companies, could establish two units–one in Latin America and one in Europe–to steer clear of any further worsening of Spain's economic troubles.
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Nine more banks have received subpoenas in connection with a probe into alleged widespread interest-rate manipulation by banks.
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President Vladimir Putin said his government had "mixed feelings" over a major takeover announced last week by the Russian oil giant Rosneft of an energy venture half owned by BP.
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Credit Suisse is quietly pushing to turn one of its trading venues into an exchange, an unusual bid that, if successful, would create the only U.S. stock exchange owned outright by a Wall Street bank.
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The once-predictable Chinese currency has become increasingly volatile, which signals a stronger role for markets in the yuan's moves but poses foreign-exchange risks for businesses and investors.
Ford outlined a broad plan to stem steep losses in Europe by closing three auto and parts factories, cutting 13% of its workforce and 18% of its new-car production capacity in the region.
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Lawyers for the Galleon Group chief said wiretaps should have been kept out of evidence because prosecutors failed to mention an SEC investigation.
Mid-career bankers are increasingly leaving their jobs without a backup plan as they confront an industry that promises less pay and prestige than they expected.
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Pearson said talks are under way to combine its Penguin Group with Random House, which is owned by Bertelsmann.
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Iran is funding aid projects and expanding intelligence networks across Afghanistan, moving to fill the void to be left by the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan by the end of 2014.
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The Victorian-era landmark St. Pancras Chambers draws professionals seeking to ride the transformation of a grimy London district.
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Long a vacation destination for the smart Latin American crowd, the area around Punta del Este has become popular with many Americans and Europeans. For an even chicer party scene, venture north to Brazil's Florianópolis.
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Police in the U.K. said they have identified about 300 potential victims in the growing sex-abuse scandal involving the late BBC host Jimmy Savile.
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Where are the world's most beautiful vineyards? In Europe, one region that stands out is the Roussillon in the northern foothills of the Pyrenees, home to France's most southern wineries.
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Does changing the man at the top really have a beneficial effect on struggling teams?
Two U.S. Special Operations troops were killed by a man in Afghan police uniform on Thursday, a day after Taliban leader Mullah Omar called on more Afghan soldiers and policemen to kill Americans.
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Printing money to fund household spending would risk bankrupting the Bank of England, Mervyn King said, in a forthright rejection of calls for the BOE to consider radical new policies to revive the U.K. economy.
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Lazard and Evercore Partners posted weaker third-quarter advisory revenue amid a skittish deal market, while Lazard unveiled a $125 million program to cut costs and staff.
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Facebook shares posted their biggest daily gain since the company's IPO in May.
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Sumner Redstone said his daughter, Shari, is in the running to succeed him one day as overseer of his controlling stakes in Viacom and CBS.
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Conversations on this middle-class block suggest voters have made up their minds about the Nov. 6 election. But many fear neither Mitt Romney nor Barack Obama can end their worries over growing health-care costs, stagnating incomes and the feeble job market.
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"Edward Hopper" at the Grand Palais, the first major show in France for the 20th-century American artist, is a splendid retrospective that covers his entire career.
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America's foreign policy hasn't improved its image in the Arab world.
In today's pictures, refugees stage a hunger strike in Berlin, a U.S. soldier gives a boy a pen in Afghanistan, Argentine sailors return home from Ghana, and more.
Believed to date back to the early 18th century, this stone barn in England's Cotswolds has been converted into a five-bedroom home with its own art gallery, gym and sauna.
This five-bedroom riverside home in north England's Northumberland was built in the 16th century as a means of protection against livestock thieves, known as reivers.
On the edge of a natural park in Ibiza, this new condominium overlooks Cala Conta, an unspoiled bay on the island's west coast.
This newly built five-bedroom country house near Oxford includes an indoor pool complex, tennis court with pavilion and over four acres of land.