Shares in the world's advertising giant WPP rose 2.6% on Tuesday, after Ford Motors announced about its intention to extend their partnership for the next year's period of 2018.
According to the BEA, the United States' trade deficit in goods widened to $68.3B in October, following the prior month's $64.1B reading, and topping analysts' expectations for a rise to $65.0B.
Roark Capital Group is planning to buy Buffalo Wild Wings for $2.4B, sending the chicken wing restaurant's shares up 6.6% at $156 on Tuesday.
Facebook is planning to expand its Artificial Intelligence software, aiming to help prevent possible impending suicides of its users by scanning their posts and comments on the platform.
TransCanada is eager to reopen the Keystone crude oil pipeline, about two weeks after the leak spilled 5K of crude barrels in South Dakota.
On Tuesday, the world top maker of carbon fibre composite materials Toray Industries Inc admitted falsification of quality data in 149 cases. The company did not name any affected customer but excluded Boeing and Fast Retailing Co Ltd.
The French President Emmanuel Macron noted on Tuesday that the new G5 Sahel force needs to overcome challenges and start fighting against Islamist militants as soon as possible. In addition to that, he urged to increase cooperation between Europe and Africa to halt illegal trafficking.
The Kremlin stated on Tuesday that the firm date for the Syrian Congress had not been set yet, adding that the main purpose was to properly prepare and agree on participant lists.
The President of Kenya Uhuru Kenyatta had been sworn in for the second five-year term on Tuesday, following his win in the Presidential election on October 26.
The outgoing Finance Minister of Mexico Jose Antonio Maede stated on Monday he would seek the ruling PRI party's presidential nomination in the next year's election.
Turkey's leader Tayyip Erdogan stated on Tuesday that he would speak to the US President Donald Trump on the phone again this week, following the talks they had held last week.
Business software giants SAP and Microsoft stated they had agreed to use and sell more of each other's online cloud services amid their layout of the common products road map designed for joint customers.
Hyundai workers in South Korea halted building the Kona SUV ahead of the US launch as a "protest move" against plans to cut assembly line headcount.
On Tuesday, Ireland's Deputy Prime Minister Frances Fitzgerald was under her own party's intense pressure to step down from her post to avoid the scheduled snap election.
According to the Financial Times, Unilever's board is about to delay its decision on picking Britain or the Netherlands as the company's home base.
On Tuesday, Toyota Motor appointed a top executive at its main supplier Denso as CFO in the latest management reshuffle.
Alphabet's autonomous car unit Waymo required a US judge for a delay of the scheduled trade secrets trial against the ride-hailing service Uber, as it seeks to investigate new important case evidence.
According to official at Korea Tourism Organization, China will allow travel companies to resume sales of tours to South Korea. However, online sales of tours, cruise travel and charter flights will continue to be forbidden.
On Tuesday, the Transportation Ministry of Indonesia said it will prolong the closure of Bali's airport for another day because flight channels continue to be covered with ash from the Mount Agung volcano.
The Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda noted on Tuesday that a "reversal rate" is an effective instrument that allows the central bank to understand the correct shape of the yield curve.
On Monday, the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari said that because inflation is low and the job market is not strong enough, there is no need to raise interest rates.
The next meeting ot the US, Canadian and Mexico officials to overhaul the NAFTA is set to begin on December 11 to reach an agreement on the main chapters of the deal.
BoJ's Goushi Kataoka stated that the Bank must extend stimulus further to reach its inflation target earlier, so that prolonged easing would not hurt the banking system of the country.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel would focus on regulation of migration and expanding business ties during the EU-Africa summit in an attemt to accelerate progress on both fronts.