On Thursday, the US President Donald Trump had appointed Neil Chatterjee, as a president of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
The US President Donald Trump criticised the US Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell for inability to finally repeal and replace the 2010 Affordable Care Act.
OPEC announced that it expects an increase in demand for crude oil in the next year, as the global consumption continued to grow.
The Commerce Department reported that the US Producer Prices Index dropped 0.1% in July, while analysts anticipated a 0.1% rise.
General Electric announced that it would close the part of the company's manufacturing facility in the city of New York, planning to relocate it to China.
Tunisair reported a yearly increase of 22.7% in the amount of passengers in July, with the total number of 384K clients travelled by the Tunisian airline in the reported period.
Statistics New Zealand reported that domestic drivers spent 4.9% less money on fuel over the course of July, the weakest monthly spending since February 2015.
The European Central Bank is more likely to change its QE programme in September, rather than in October, an analysts' poll showed.
Barclays appointed the ex-Citigroup banker Barry Rodriguez as its Barclaycard International's director, the British bank reported on Thursday.
Mitsubishi is eager to launch export of its new multipurpose car from the carmaker's Indonesian factory next year and is aimed to supply it to the company's new parent Nissan Motor.
On Thursday, the European Union banned four entities and nine people, adding them to the North Korea sanctions list on the back of the United Nations measures against Pyongyang's missile tests.
The number of applications for US unemployment benefits surged 3K to 244K in the week ending August 5, following the prior week's upwardly revised 241K reading.
The United Arab Emirates sentenced an Iranian national to 10 years in prison for spying and aiding Iran's nuclear programme, the local news agencies reported on Thursday.
On Thursday, Germany's Volkswagen and Indian Tata Motors finished their negotiations over car development cooperation for emerging markets, saying the strategic benefits are below their threshold levels.
According to the Turkish foreign ministry, Germany's lawmakers are scheduled to visit German soldiers at Konya's air base on September 8 as a part of the NATO trip.
The United States is willing to take "any appropriate actions" to protect the country from North Korean threats, following the North's plans to launch rockets on the US Pacific territory of Guam.
The Philippines would raise nearly $591.7M by sale of 20-year bonds in the country's market to fund the rebuilding of its southern city Marawi, the Finance Department stated.
Turkey is set to impose limitation on the amount of non-humanitarian products movement at the border crossing with Syria, as the Syrian side remained under terrorist control.
According to the Infratest dimap poll, support for the German Chancellor Angela Merkel dropped by 10 points six weeks ahead of the election in which she sought to win another term.
On Thursday, Turkey's government ordered detention of 35 people in Anadolu on suspicion of connections to the last year's failed military coup attempt.
On Thursday, a double-decker bus rammed into a building in the South of London, leaving a number of passengers injured and two people trapped inside.
Toshiba is still making attempts to close its chip business sale by the end of the fiscal year to the upcoming March, hoping to cover a $6.3B impact in liabilities related to Westinghouse.
The Danish toymaker Lego announced on Thursday it had appointed Niels B. Christiansen as a new chief executive with intention to replace Bali Padda, who would take a special advisory role for the company.
The Peru Foreign Minister stated that the Venezuelan political crisis deepening might lead to civil war, following imploding of the country's economy under the rule of the President Nicolas Maduro.