The European Union announced on Friday that it has agreed to London's request to extend Brexit without a set departure date.
On Friday, Chinese trade officials asked the US to remove some tariffs in exchange for buying US agricultural products.
A report published by Indonesian authorities on Friday revealed that Boeing failed to design the software for 737 MAX airliner.
On Friday, Amazon stock price fell by almost six percent, as the markets were let down by lower than forecast sales.
At the end of European Friday's trading session, a ten percent decline in the share prices of brewing firm Anheuser-Busch InBev was named as the cause of a stock sell off.
On Friday, US stock indices opened lower, as worse than expected Amazon sales forecast caused a sell off, which outweighed other announcements.
The European Union bloc is preparing to toughen laws against money laundering, as previous reforms did not deliver results on tackling a couple of banking scandals, according to EU's draft document.
Verizon Communications topped Wall Street's expectations for the Q3 revenue and profit on Friday, as the company added 615K postpaid customers, beating analysts' estimates for the 527K reading.
On Friday, Virgin Australia Holdings has issued $425M notes, as it is eager to fund its frequent flyer programme Velocity's buyback.
On Friday, H&M has launched a new-look small boutique in Berlin's trendy neighbourhood, offering yoga classes and a garden cafe, as well as free space for other brands on the back of Sweden's budget chain intention to revive sluggish sales.
The tyre maker Michelin announced on Thursday that it is still expecting the same results for 2019, as it had forecast in the last quarter.
On Thursday, Nasdaq stock indices surged due to a rise in the prices of Microsoft and PayPal stocks.
Micron Technology, the Idaho-based memory chipmaker, has launched new hard drives line aimed at data centres, seeking to challenge its rival Intel Corp, as two chip giants are in the process of officially halting their joint venture.
Boris Johnson, the British Prime Minister, has called for general election to be held on December 12, seeking to break the Brexit deadlock, and admitting he would not meet the "do or die" deadline for leaving the EU bloc next week.
Tesla has surprised Wall Street by reporting better-than-expected Q3 profit results, as promised by the electric carmaker's CEO Elon Musk, sending its shares up 18% to $301.
Qualcomm, which supplies chips for the next generation of mobile networks, known as 5G technology, has announced a $200M venture capital fund seeking to invest in start-ups aiming at 5G usage in other devices rather than phones.
Ardian is planning to launch a sale of the German professional loudspeaker producer d&b Audiotechnik, in a potential deal that could value the company at over €600M, according to sources familiar with the matter.
Twitter has reported its revenue and profit were hit in the Q3 by weaker advertising and low demand during the summer time, sending the company's shares down nearly 15%.
The Czech Republic is considering to adhere to German and other neighbouring countries' approach regarding Huawei in 5G network building and abandon the idea of banning the Chinese company, the industry minister stated.
Nissan Motor is planning to sell two of its EU production sites, as the Japanese automaker is facing dropping sales in this region, as well as industry shift towards electric vehicles, according to a Bloomberg report.
VTB, Russia's state-controlled lender, is considering a 10% stake sale in its Angolan unit VTB Africa that would reduce the bank's total stake in the African arm to 40%, VTB's CEO Andrei Kostin stated.
On Thursday, Mario Draghi, the President of the European Central Bank, welcomed new executive board member, Isabel Schnabel, nominated by Germany, who would stimulate discussions at the bank, giving Berlin an expert voice on its issues.
The Swedish Crown surged to its strongest against the US Dollar and also gained about 0.6% in value against the Euro on Thursday after the Riksbank stuck to its plans to hike interest rate in December.
Adel al-Jubeir, Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister, stated on Thursday that applying maximum pressure was the only way to get Iran to negotiate.