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The EU gave the green light to nearly €40 billion ($51.78 billion) in euro-zone funding for Spain's stricken bank sector, as it approved restructuring plans for four lenders.
Investors are requesting face-to-face meetings with CEOs before taking a stake in a company. CEO say the meetings leave them with less time to run their companies.
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Illegal shipments of missile technology and weapons from North Korea have flowed unabated under Kim Jong Eun's leadership, dashing hopes that Pyongyang's new leader might moderate his country's aggressive stance.
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An exclusive WSJ examination of executives who traded their own company's stock just before their companies made news finds that far more recorded notable gains than saw the stock move against them.
U.S. stock-market futures fell, with investors on edge over concerns of potential difficulties over the fiscal-cliff negotiations.
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Virtu Financial has emerged as the early front-runner to buy Knight Capital Group in a deal expected to value the bruised brokerage firm at more than $1 billion.
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This year, steel mills around the world have a production capacity of 1.8 billion tons but will take orders for only 1.5 billion tons. And instead of consolidating, the industry is building still more capacity.
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Banks are seeing a steep decline in profits from currency trading, as once-lucrative businesses are eroded by the rise of electronic trading and the proliferation of new platforms.
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Shoppers across Europe are pinching pennies as the debt crisis enters its third year, forcing retailers to cut prices and push promotions.
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The federal lending program designed to make college education available to everyone is creating a pile of debt so large it is fanning worries that it has become too easy to borrow too much.
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Walter S. Mossberg: Nokia's new Lumia 920 smartphone is a quality phone with attractive features and twice the typical memory, but it is thick and heavy.
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Private-equity firms are divided over whether Myanmar will be a source of huge profits, or just another place to endure losses.
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Worries about the "fiscal cliff" don't appear to be weighing on the housing market. Perhaps they never will.
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The last time Washington wrangled over the deficit, in the summer of 2011, U.S. businesses watched nervously from the sidelines, a decision that many came to regret. This time, CEOs are flocking to the capital to make their voices heard.
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ConAgra, with its $4.95 billion deal to buy Ralcorp, is poised to be the largest maker of private-label foods in the U.S., a segment it believes will grow as retailers use in-house brands to cater to frugal consumers.
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Millions of first-time computer buyers in Indonesia are expected to bolster revenue at Intel, which has been struggling in more-developed markets.
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Commentary: How increased transparency could lead to increased earnings.
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Enrique Peña Nieto takes office Saturday with a clear goal for his six-year presidential term: Get people to see the country less as a killing ground and more as a dynamic economy.
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Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra and three top cabinet ministers easily survived a no-confidence vote, but analysts say Thailand's deep political divide is far from resolved.
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Fab.com CEO Jason Goldberg talks about how his retail site has built a following selling fake beards and Gummy Bear-shaped night lights.
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Scientists are studying how to tap the energy naturally created by people's bodies—such as heat, sound and movement—to power medical devices without the need to change batteries.
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Could a car that knows when you are stressed or ill save you from having an accident? Auto makers are stepping up efforts to find out.
The feds blame the states for refusing to become ObamaCare subsidiaries.
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Some employees whose workplaces were damaged by Sandy have adapted by working from home or relocating to other buildings. But others face a harsher reality: being out of work as employers rebuild.
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New studies on older endurance athletes suggest the fittest reap few health benefits.
For employees who want to get ahead, flexibility, productivity, communications skills and a strong personal brand will be essential.
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This 1930 Spanish-style home once belonged to Hollywood funnyman Joe E. Brown. Tinsel town charms, like a former film projection room and a suede-upholstered bedroom, are included.
The Wall Street Journal is tracking three business owners over four weeks to monitor their status in the wake of hurricane Sandy. Read the third installment of the Journal's multimedia project.
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In today’s pictures, a boy carries a goat in Congo, a man walks through snow on the second day of firearm deer season in Pennsylvania, a man exhumes a grave in Singapore, and more.
India's annual camel fair in Pushkar attracts thousands of tourists and onlookers. Photographer Brent Lewin shares his visual highlights of the event.
A four-meter robot created by Japanese artist Kogoro Kurata that can be controlled by a pilot from its cockpit or by smartphone is on sale for $1 million.