On Tuesday, the United States, Canada and Mexico met in Montreal to start a week-long round of talks concerning the NAFTA.
On Tuesday, China and South Korea protested against the US President Donald Trump's approval of steep tariffs on imports of solar panels and washing machines.
The Richmond Fed reported that its PMI for the region dropped to 14 in January from December's 20, while analysts expected a slight fall to 19 points.
The CBI reported on Tuesday that its Industrial Order Expectations Index fell to 14 points in January from the prior month's 17, whereas analysts anticipated a decline to 13.
Twitter's Chief Operating Officer Anthony Noto quitted his post amid his decision to join the online lender Social Finance as CEO, sending Twitter shares down over 3% on Tuesday.
The Snapchat messaging application will let its users share public stories outside the app via a new feature that should be launched on Tuesday.
Apple is set to start receiving online orders for its new HomePod smart speaker from January 26 in the United Kingdom, United States and Australia, more than a month later than it was initially planned.
Facebook is about to make privacy controls management for its over 2B users easier ahead of the European Union tough law that would come into force in a few months.
On Tuesday, the former Catalonia's leader Carles Puigdemont stated that a "huge majority" of Catalonia's Parliament supported appointing him as the President.
JPMorgan Chase revealed on Tuesday its $20B investment plan that is set to raise wages, open new branches and hire more staff, following fundamental changes to the US tax law.
The investor RBR Capital Advisors called for a shake-up at the Swiss bank Credit Suisse, saying that replacing the IT platform and cutting jobs could create "enormous" value.
On Tuesday, Finance Ministers of the European Union confirmed the removal of Panama and seven other jurisdictions from the EU tax haven blacklist, a month after it was set up.
The British Competition and Markets Authority has ruled that Rupert Murdoch's $15.7B deal to acquire the telecommunications company Sky was not in the public interest.
IMF warned that the solid global growth caused primarily by slow US rate hikes and the ECB's large balance sheet was not sustainable, thus requiring structural reforms.
Shares in Carrefour jumped 6.3% on Tuesday, following its new CEO Alexandre Bompard's promises to cut costs, step up the e-commerce investment and bring Carrefour China within the reach to investors.
The US State Secretary Rex Tillerson stated that the United States should focus on strengthening its relations with Britain, days after Donald Trump had cancelled its London trip over embassy sale.
On Tuesday, the UK police closed the Charing Cross train station in central London, while hundreds of people were evacuated from nearby hotels and nightclubs amid a major gas leak.
Eleven countries are set to sign a new trans-Pacific trade agreement in March, following the United States withdrawal from its earlier version in 2017.
Singapore is reviewing anti-corruption law, following a growing pressure on the country's government to severe the rules amid the increased incidence of criminal wrongdoing among companies.
Daimler's Mercedes-Benz is planning to recall 6,639 vehicles in Russia, following an order that affects cars of the majority of carmaker's classes that were produced in the 2012-2014 time period.
China's Beijing Automotive Group is set to take its electric car unit public by implementing it into the listed subsidiary in a move worth $4.5B.
Netflix took a $39M charge late last year amid sexual misconduct scandal that involved the actor Kevin Spacey, as the streaming video service stopped all projects associated with him.
The US President Donald Trump has imposed steep import tariffs on solar panels and washing machines in an attempt to protect domestic producers.
The South Korean Financial Services Commission is to ban traders from using anonymous bank accounts in trading cryptocurrencies from January 30 in order to avoid money laundering.