On Thursday, Televisa, Mexico's multimedia mass media company, reported that it would partner with Amazon to distribute its original content through its streaming platform.
BMW has agreed to pay more than $2.2M to settle charges that it refused to refund lease payments to 492 military service members who terminated their vehicle leases because they were called to duty.
US major stock markets rebounded strongly on Thursday as the prospects of more rate hikes this year faded.
Germany's top administrative court has delayed until next week a ruling on whether to allow a ban on diesel cars in major cities to lower air pollution.
On Thursday, the Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau received from the Indian government a list of nine people in Canada connected to the Sikh separatist movement in Punjab.
The EIA reported on Thursday that crude oil inventories dropped 1.6M barrels in the week ended February 16, after rising 1.8M barrels in the prior week, while analysts expected a 2.2M-barrel gain.
The EIA reported that natural gas inventories showed a draw of 124B cubic feet in the week ended February 16, following the preceding week's decrease of 194B cubic feet.
The Conference Board reported on Thursday that its Leading Index for the US economy rose 1.0% in January, after climbing 0.6% in the prior month, whereas analysts anticipated an increase of 0.7%.
The Bank of Russia was set to pledge extra capital to Oktritie Bank in additional to already provided $8B last year, Otkritie's CEO stated on Thursday.
Ford Motor's President in North America Raj Nair has departed abruptly from the company, following an internal inquiry that found his behaviour was incompatible with the company's standards of conduct.
Latvian bank ABLV sought €480M loan from the central bank, seeking to reopen its doors after it was forced to cease all payments amid accusations of money laundering.
The US Department of Labour reported that unemployment claims were down 8K, reaching the 222K mark in the week ended February 17, missing analysts' expectations.
On Thursday, the European Court ordered the Netherlands to end the disputed corporate tax advantages as they breach the bloc's rules.
According to a Novantas survey, at least 60% of Americans prefer to open a new account at bank branches, instead of mobile apps, saying online-only banks appear to be "less legitimate".
Snapchat promised it would launch a new update within the coming weeks to make some changes to its "Friends and Discover" app section, after users balked at its latest redesign.
On Thursday, German prosecution said it had been searching the three new suspects' homes amid the alleged links to the Audi emissions scandal.
Iran is set to withdraw from the 2015 nuclear deal in case it brings no economic benefit, while major banks keep doing business with the Islamic State.
Ukraine's government might vote on approving the candidate for the central bank governor's role on March 1, a Speaker for the Parliament Andriy Parubiy stated on Thursday.
The number of migrants in Britain plunged 29K to 244K in the year to September 2017, compared to the year of 2016, according to official data published on Thursday.
Uber Technologies' CEO stated on Thursday that there were not expected any change in its India business after the SoftBank investment deal.
The highest administrative court of Germany in Leipzig will decide on Thursday on the fate of 15M diesel vehicles over the presumable ban in case of heavy pollution of the country.
Germany decided to suspend the preferential visas for the Cambodia government members' private travels, including the country's PM Hun Sun, amid the authorities' crackdown on its opposition.
On Wednesday, Twitter stated it would not let people make posts with identical content from multiple accounts in its crackdown on such a tactic used to make topics or tweets to go viral.
Oil prices fell early on Thursday, as the positive response from reduced US crude inventories could not outweigh a stronger Greenback.