CaixaBank, Commerzbank, Erste Group and Bank of Montreal joined UBS and IBM groups to build a blockchain-based technology aimed at supporting trade finance transactions.
On Wednesday, Airbus stated that it had all the capacity to raise the A350 aircraft production above company's targeted level of ten planes a month by the next year's end.
On Wednesday, the Mongolia Parliament appointed its new Prime Minister Ukhnaa Khurelsukh, putting the country back on track to receive the IMF funds from a $5.5B economic rescue package.
A Competition Commissioner of the European Union Margrethe Vestager is set to speak at the news conference on Wednesday in Brussels over two state aid cases.
Three Turkish soldiers were reported to be dead and five more wounded after Kurdish militants detonated a bomb in the Southeast Turkey, close to the Iranian border.
The US and Japan leaders Donald Trump and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe are set to hold phone talks on Wednesday over the shooting in Las Vegas and North Korean missile programme.
China's imports of soybeans from the United States are expected to be delayed by no less than two weeks amid suppliers' struggle to find high-quality beans after hurricanes damaged the crop.
On Wednesday, humanitarian groups stated that they needed $434M for the next six months, seeking to help about 1.2M fleeing Rohingya Muslims in Bangladesh.
The governor of the Philippine Central Bank Nestor Espenilla has announced that the bank won't change the country's monetary policy in the short term.
The share price of Japan Display jumped 24% after an announcement on Wednesday that the company will mass produce low cost OLED screens.
The Defence Secretary of the US Jim Mattis on Tuesday announced that the United States will try again to collaborate with Pakistan in the territory of Afghanistan.
Honda Motor CEO Takahiro Hachigo will hold a press conference at 06:30 GMT on Wednesday. However, the topic of the conference has not been revealed.
The World Bank raised expectations for the economic growth in East Asia and Pacific for 2017 and 2018 years, but saw the outlook clouded due to geopolitical tensions and trade protectionism.
Japanese Transport Ministry stated that it conducted raids at two factories producing Nissan cars, as part of investigation on unauthorised vehicle inspections.
Ford Motors is set to cut $14B in costs over the course of the next five years, while shifting capital investment from sedans to hybrid and electric cars and more trucks' development.
The Japan Services PMI dropped to a seasonally adjusted 51.0 in September, indicating the slowest pace of expansion in 11 months, as new orders growth eased in the reported period.
The French National Assembly approved counter-terrorism legislation that empowers police at times when a terror threat is considered to be extreme.
The CEO of Goldman Sachs said that he kept an open mind on bitcoin following a media report that the investment bank was studying a new trading operation dedicated to cryptocurrencies.
Bitcoin is expected to rally 40% to reach $6,000 by the year end, but investors should be prepared for elevated volatility.
The UK Prime Minister Theresa May assured that the government would do its best to help to restore Northern Ireland's power-sharing government, adding that Brexit would not mean the return of a hard border between the British province and Ireland.
The leader of Saudi Arabia heads to Russia to discuss collaboration on oil production, and differences over Syria and Iran, as well as to sign a number of investment deals.
Amazon is expected to receive an order from the EU regulators to pay Luxembourg millions of euros in back taxes, the latest international company to be hit by an EU crackdown on unfair tax deals.
The Marine Corps General Joseph Dunford stated on Tuesday that Pakistan's spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence, had links with Islamist groups.
Hundreds of elderly Greeks took the streets of the city of Athens on Tuesday to protest against deeper pension cuts.