Alphabet's Google launched a paid-for news platform in Australia, following an official requirement from Canberra for tech giants to pay for media content.
Robinhood, the online brokerage app, has lifted its temporary trading restraints on all stocks, including AMC Entertainment Holdings and GameStop Corp, its website shows.
On Friday, oil prices surged about 1%, after hitting their record high in a year, driven by economic growth hopes as well as OPEC+ output cuts.
Indonesia, the world's largest nickel producer, received the investment proposal from Tesla, an official stated.
Samsung Electronics considered Austin, Texas, as one of the sites for its new $17B chip plant, seeking combined tax abatements of $805.5M over 20 years.
PayPal Holdings stated that it cooperated with the US consumer watchdog on a civil investigation demand relating to its app Venmo's alleged unauthorized money transfers.
On Friday, German prosecutors revealed that despite seizing $60 million in Bitcoin, the authorities cannot access it because the previous owner would not give up the required wallet password.
It was revealed on Friday that the US Senate had passed the budget plan that would advance the $1.9 billion stimulus package.
On Friday, the US Dollar was set to book its best week during a period of three months despite forecasts of a decline in 2021.
Exxon Mobil is considering to add Jeff Ubben, the activist investor, to the company's board, according to Bloomberg News report.
On Friday, Alphabet's Google launched a paid-for news platform in Australia, inking content deals with Australian publishers, after Canberra made a legal requirement for tech giants to pay for the content.
SoftBank Group is planning to extend its earnings recovery after reporting its Q3 results earlier this week, as frothy markets boosted the value of the group's tech investment portfolio.
Pinterest, the image-sharing company, posted better-than-anticipated quarterly results, driven by robust user growth as well as heavy advertising during the festive season, sending its shares up nearly 10%.
During Friday's Asian and European trading hours, global stock indices surged. The surge was attributed to progress in coronavirus vaccine distribution.
Ford Motor boosted its investment plan for electric and self-driving vehicles by more than a half, to $29B, despite posting a Q4 net loss of $2.8B.
Robinhood, the online brokerage app, removed its trading restraints on all stocks, including AMC Entertainment Holdings and GameStop Corp.
On Friday, Tencent-backed Kuaishou Technology soared three-fold in its stock market debut in Hong Kong, following a $5.4B IPO.
PayPal Holdings Inc is set to shut its domestic payments services in India from April 1, switching focus to cross-border payments business.
Lufthansa announced that it issued a €1.6B bond, money that will be used to repay a bailout by state lender KfW for coping with the COVID-19 crisis.
Pinterest revealed better-than-anticipated quarterly results, with total revenue soaring 76% to $706M, thanks to heavy advertising and strong user growth.
Ford Motor increased the amount of funds it planned to invest in electric and autonomous cars to $29B even as it reported a Q4 net loss of $2.8B.
The telecommunications network equipment producer Nokia announced on Thursday that it expects a challenging 2021, as the company catches up with other companies.
On Thursday, Reuters revealed that the consulting company McKinsey & Co would pay $573 million to settle claims about its role in the ongoing US opioid epidemic.
During Thursday's European trading hours, Deutsche Bank announced that in 2020 the bank had made its first minor profit since 2014.