France's budget deficit has to be brought back below the EU 3% ceiling in 2017 to help restore credibility under Emmanuel Macron, Pierre Moscovici revealed.
Jim Mattis, the US Defence Secretary, revealed that there are no signs that Russia wants a good relationship with the US as it decided to be a strategic competitor.
France and Britain are set to join forces to push tech companies to do more for tackling online extremism, Theresa May's spokesman revealed.
The Bank of Japan is likely to pursue taking monetary policy steps for price stability, while watching how that may affect the bank's financial health, a senior official revealed.
On Monday, the technology stock selloff went on for the second consecutive day during the New York session, while oil prices rose on the grounds of the US inventory declines.
Al Qaeda militants affirmed the responsibility for gun attack on the army camp and two car bombs in southeastern Yemen that killed 12 people, including two soldiers.
The US Supreme Court has invalidated a gender inequality in the US immigration law, which treated fathers and mothers differently regarding the determination of a child's citizenship.
The UK's PM May stated that she would stay the First Minister as long as Conservative lawmakers support her, even after the botched election that weakened Britain's hand days just before the Brexit negotiations.
The second US Court of Appeals has ruled against the President Trump's revised travel ban for citizens of six Muslim countries, defending the lower court's decision.
Honeywell International's aerospace business that was under a review for a spin off had benefited from the massive investment from the US manufacturing and technology company.
On Monday, the Russian Interior Ministry reported the state police had detained 500 participants of an unsanctioned anti-Kremlin protest in St Petersburg.
Court records revealed the San Francisco-based children's clothing chain Gymboree filed for bankruptcy protection under the Chapter 11, aiming to reduce its debt by around $1B.
At a meeting with reporters at the White House, the US President Donald Trump said he was planning to hold a press conference to discuss the fight against IS in two weeks' time.
On Monday, Hawaii called on the Supreme Court of the United States not to revive Trump's travel ban after it had been blocked by lower state's courts.
United States inflation expectations slipped over the month of May, with the three-year-ahead gauge hitting its lowest mark in nearly a year.
Shares of Apple went 3.6% down on Monday, as Mizuho Securities downgraded its iPhone maker rating from "buy" to "neutral".
On Monday, ExxonMobil spokesperson reported the company had completed a planned examination of its second-largest gasoline refinery in Baytown, Texas.
The Governor of the Colombian Central Bank Juan Jose Echavarria claimed he expected the bank to slash its interest rates by at least 100 basis points in 2017.
The current Opel CFO Michael Lohscheller will replace Karl-Thomas Neumann as the carmaker's CEO following Neumann's resignation on the back of the General Motor decision to sell its EU division to the French PSA Group.
France's bank Natixis filed a $32M suit against the metal broker Marex Spectron over the deemed fraudulent nickel receipts stored at Asian warehouses that were operated by Glencore.
The Norwegian government stated it intended to ban the full-face Muslim veils in all the educational institutions, following some others EU states, which have already banned face-covering veils in public places.
According to Theresa May's spokesman, the Brexit plan will remain unchanged despite the British PM's majority loss in the UK election.
The French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire stated that he expected Greece to reach the agreement on new loans from the EU creditors after the Athens negotiations with the Greek PM Alexis Tsipras.
John Flannery will be appointed as a new Chief Executive of General Electric on August 1 as Jeff Immelt is eager to retire; however, Immenlt will remain company's chairman until December 31.