The Prime Minister of Japan Shinzo Abe intends to cooperate with China to find a resolution to the North Korean missile and nuclear programme crisis.
On Tuesday, Vietnam's Primer Minister Nguyen Phuc announced that he was eager to sign deals for the US goods and services for up to $17B during his Washington visit.
Uber Tech fired the chief of its self-driving car unit Anthony Levandowski in the centre of the court case with Alphabet's Waymo after he failed to transfer necessary documents to the court.
On Wednesday, a car bomb blasted in the Afghani capital of Kabul near the German embassy and the Presidential Palace, leaving several people dead and wounded.
Toshiba Corporation announced on Wednesday that the company will host a general shareholder meeting at the end of June. The meeting will take place on June 28.
On the eight day of their assault the Philippine's military urged the Islamist militants, which occupy the southern part of the Marawi city to surrender.
Nguyen Xuan Phuc, the PM of Vietnam, revealed that he is likely to sign trade deals worth $15B to $17B with the US to increase the import of services and high technologies.
The Fed requested Deutsche Bank to pay $41M of fine for failing to maintain its anti-laundering protection in four-year period from 2011.
China's manufacturing PMI maintained its growth pace at 51.2 in May, while analysts anticipated the economy to lose some momentum after strong Q1 data.
Japan's industrial output rose 4.0% in April, almost reaching its six-year high as economic growth continued to improve amid higher overseas demand.
The Kansas City Fed and the Richmond Fed supported an increase of the Bank's discount rate ahead of its May meeting, the minutes released on Tuesday showed.
BlackRock's CEO Larry Fink reported on Tuesday that the company's Q2 earnings and growth might disappoint investors.
The Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard reported on Tuesday that a rate increase could happen very soon; however, the Bank might postpone it if inflation fails to show solid growth.
On Tuesday, Cevian Capital, an international investment firm, bought a 5.6% stake in Ericsson, Sweden's mobile telecom equipment producer.
China is set to implement from Thursday a new cyber security law that requires strict data storage and surveillance, aiming to diminish risks of cyber attacks.
The Atlanta Federal Reserve raised its forecast for the US economy to expand at a 3.8% annualised pace in the second quarter of 2017.
Germany Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel admitted that the country's relations with the US faces some problems, but are likely to improve in the future.
Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May said that she wants the UK to keep a special partnership with the EU and continue cooperation on security and defense issues.
Statistics Canada reported that the country's current account deficit expanded to $14.05B for the first quarter of 2017, due to higher imports of goods and services.
The Conference Board reported that the Consumer Confidence Index for the US dropped to 117.9 in May, diminishing expectations for the consumption-driven strong economic growth.
Russia's President Vladimir Putin and Saudi Prince Mohammed bin Salman praised their talks on Syria and growing cooperation in oil markets.
The Commerce Department revealed that US personal spending rose 0.4% in April, following the prior month's upwardly revised figure of 0.3% and matching analysts' expectations.
The German SPD's leader Martin Schulz criticised the US President Donald Trump, saying that he was a destroyer of all the Western values and undermined international cooperation between nations based on tolerance and respect.
On Tuesday, Brazil's lower house speaker Rodrigo Maia stated that pension reform talks would restart in a few weeks after a political scandal halted the discussions that month.