On Tuesday, two vice chairmen from Hyundai Motor Group, who are leading research and development, offered their resignations.
Instagram, the Facebook-backed photo-sharing app, announced on Monday about the promotion granted to Vishal Shah from the Product Management Director to the Head of Product.
Uber Technologies is seeking integration of the London Tube and bus timetables into its application, putting the ride-hailing service into the direct competition with Citymapper, according to Financial Times.
Germany's luxury automaker Daimler announced on Tuesday it would acquire the electric vehicle battery cells worth $22.75B by 2030, as the company prepared for mass production of the hybrid and electric cars.
On Tuesday, Apple has officially released its mobile payments service Apple Pay in Germany, four years after it had launched the app in the United States.
China's court has imposed a ban on the older iPhone models sales in the country over Apple's violation of two Qualcomm's patents.
Canada's electric utility Hydro One and its buyout goal Avista are planning to file a petition, urging the Washington UTC to reconsider the rejection of their merger deal.
Spain's motorway group Abertis is set to look at new potential acquisition deals in the target markets under its new owners, Hochtief, ACS and Atlantia, the company's Chairman Marcelino Fernandez Verdes stated on Tuesday.
On Monday, Verizon Communications stated it would cut about 10,400 jobs by the middle of next year amid the US wireless carrier's voluntary separation programme.
The Foreign Minister of Mexico on Monday announced that Mexico will invest into various projects more than $30 billion in the southern states during the next five years.
On Tuesday, crude oil prices surged. Financial media attributed the surge to the Libyan National Oil Company's difficulties with exporting oil, as militants have captured an oil field.
During the Asian session on Tuesday the British currency continued to decline, as the announcement of the delay of the Parliament vote on the Brexit deal started a descent of the GBP already on Monday.
On Tuesday, the financial media attributed the surge in Asian stock prices to the fact that China confirmed that it is in trade negotiations with the United States.
Fast-food group Restaurant Brands New Zealand singed a deal to expand "Tex-Mex" food chain Taco Bell's brand in Australian New South Wales and New Zealand, the company stated.
Mexico is likely to invest more than $30B in the country's poor states over the next five-year period, the Foreign Minister stated, boosting the region economically within efforts to stem migration.
Theresa May, Britain's Prime Minister, is likely to meet Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel on Tuesday to discuss concerns expressed by the UK lawmakers over her Brexit deal, her office stated.
Emmanuel Macron, the President of France, promised to raise minimum wages and cut taxes for pensioners in January, though refused to reinstate a tax on wealth.
Tivity Health's shares plunged more than 30% this Monday after the announcement it will acquire the developer of diet plans Nutrisystem, as the firm's intention to partner with the large health insurers has been met with skepticism.
On Monday, Linde announced it had raised its squeeze-out proposal to €189.46 per share to complete its merger deal with the US rival Praxair, offering the shareholders additional €1.22 to reach the agreement.
The British credit check company Experian agreed to acquire South Africa's peer Compuscan in a deal valued at $262.78M, boosting the company's existing operations in Africa.
ASG Technologies Group, owned by the buyout group Elliott Management, raised its offer to acquire Mitek Systems to $11.50 for a share from the previous stock price of $10, as the company put all efforts to clinch a takeover deal with the fintech provider to banks.
Shanghai Junshi Biosciences, China's biotech company, is hoping to attract up to $414M in its planned initial public offering in Hong Kong by selling 158.9M of its shares at the price range of $2.48-$2.61.
The buyout companies Elliott Management and Siris Capital Group are set to take Travelport Worldwide private in a $4.4B deal, after Elliott's eight month-long efforts to acquire the travel software firm alone.
The Bank of England and the European Central Bank are set to work on a deal laying out post-Brexit treatment of banks in their respective jurisdictionst, Ignazio Angeloni stated.