The Iranian Parliament fears that the United States' exit from the Iran nuclear accord could mean the end of the international agreement, as the President Donald Trump sought to decertify the deal.
On Friday, China's Court sentenced the country's most-wanted fugitive to eight years in jail for graft and accepting bribes, state media reported.
Airbus stated on Friday that it had not found any suppliers that were affected by the Kobe Steel cheating scandal, despite the Nikkei newspaper asserted otherwise.
Turkey's authorities ordered detention of 115 people across the country amid a widening crackdown after the 2016 failed military coup attempt.
On Friday, Toshiba's CEO stated that the chip unit is discussing possible joint investment with Western Digital's Sandisk for Yokkaichi plant's new memory product line.
The EU aviation regulator said that emergency slides on the Airbus A340 and A330 aircraft night be broken amid improper folding carried out by maintenance crews, as it led to lacks or cracks in shutoff valves.
BASF signed a $7B deal with Bayer to buy its non-selective herbicide and seed businesses, the heads of the both companies announced on Friday.
The US aviation authorities ordered the Airbus A380 jet engine inspections, following the last month's incident on an Air France flight, as aircraft's engine came apart and led to an emergency landing.
The Boston-based multinational financial services corporation Fidelity Investments is now testing virtual reality feature for customer service representatives' training.
On Friday, the Vietnamese Disaster Prevention Agency reported no less than 54 people had died and at least 39 had gone missing amid destructive floods that battered the country this week.
On Friday, the South Korean electronics firm Samsung Electronics said its Chief Executive Officer Kwon Oh-hyun had announced his plans to resign from the company's management.
According to the data released by the Customs General Administration of China, the country's September trade balance came in worse than expected, narrowing to 193B yuan ($29.4B).
Justin Trudeau said that Canada is unlikely to walk away from negotiations to rehash the NAFTA, despite the US proposal to involve a clause to terminate the pact in the next five years.
Walt Disney is set to cut nearly 250 positions at its ABC Television Group and other cable networks with the most layoffs in operational areas, according to the sources familiar with the matter.
Electric carmaker Tesla is recalling 11K of its Model X sport cars worldwide by the reason of faulty locking mechanism rising the risk of rear seats leaning forward in crash.
Haruhiko Kuroda, the BoJ Governor, stressed the Central Bank's resolve to keep its ultra-loose policy, even when its European and US peers start to dial back massive monetary stimulus.
The Mexican central bank is expected to keep a prudent monetary policy stance amid adverse scenarios in US-Mexican ties, which could increase risks for economic growth and the Peso.
The US and Israel announced that the countries quitted the U.N.'s cultural agency UNESCO after Washington accused it of anti-Israel bias.
The US President Donald Trump signed executive order aimed at allowing small businesses to band together across state lines to purchase cheaper, less regulated health plans for their staff with fewer benefits.
The White House Chief of Staff John Kelly said that the Trump administration believed that the threat posed by the North Korean nuclear weapons capability was currently manageable.
The St. Louis Fed President James Bullard warned that the Fed risked losing credibility and possibly triggering a recession if it continues monetary policy normalisation without firm evidence that the pace of prices increases strengthens.
The German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said that a soft Brexit featuring trade deals would be the best option to minimise damage to Britain and the EU.
Sources close to the matter reported on Thursday that General Motors would cut production at its plant in Detroit and lay off 1.5K workers.
The Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg stated on Thursday that the company "absolutely" supported the public release of the 3,000 Russia-linked ads that ran during the 2016 US Election.