During Tuesday's European trading hours, global stock indices surged to a two-week high, as certainty was caused by the US President returning to the White House.
Faraday Future, the electric vehicle start-up, is in talks over going public via a reverse merger deal with SPAC, its CEO stated.
A joint venture of Toyota Motor and Panasonic are set to build lithium-ion batteries for hybrid vehicles in Western Japan beginning in 2022, according to the company's statement made on Tuesday.
SAP has pledged to allocate about 5% of its spending to diverse businesses and social enterprises by 2025, aiming to encourage greater environmental and social responsibility.
Southwest Airlines is seeking unions to agree on pay cuts to avoid layoffs and furloughs through 2021 amid struggles in the industry to stem losses caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
The Head of the US Senate Majority leader Mitch McConnell announced on Monday that he did not see a possible deal on stimulus.
On Monday, Bloomberg revealed that Johnson & Johnson would pay a fine of more than $100 million to settle talc lawsuits.
The Minister of Economy of Germany Peter Altmaier stated on Monday that Germany would avoid another industrial shutdown.
On Monday, the President of the Chicago Federal Reserve Charles Evans stated that he expects US inflation to reach 2% by 2023.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission approved IPO applications of Xinjiang Hongtong Natural Gas and Zhejiang Dayang Biotech Group.
Retail sales in Singapore decreased by 5.7% to $2.49B in August, compared to the same period in 2019, the Department of Statistics of Singapore reports.
Online shopping in South Korea reached a record high of $12.4B in August, an increase of 27.5% from the same period the prior year, data published by the Statistics Korea show.
The Finnish Finance Ministry revised its economic growth forecast upwards to 2.6% for 2021 and 1.7% for 2022, a statement published by the ministry shows.
The retail trade in the euro area increased by 4.4% in August, compared to the previous month, data published by the European statistical office Eurostat show.
The Philippine Airlines plans to cut around 2,700 employees amid the coronavirus pandemic, data published by the company show.
Indonesia has entered talks with Tesla, the US electric vehicles maker, over the possible investment in the country, an Indonesian official said.
Units of Siemens and Macquarie Group are creating a joint venture "Calibrant Energy" with plans to make an investment in the EaaS sector in the US, both firms reported on Monday.
Rovio Entertainment announced on Monday its CEO Kati Levoranta is set to quit her position at the Angry Birds game maker at the 2020-end, sending the company's shares up 1.2%.
Japan's Sony Corp and Kioxia Holdings, the memory chipmaker, are seeking the US approval to keep supplying Huawei Technologies, according to Nikkei report.
On Monday, Microsoft revealed that the company would build a new cloud service hub in Greece.
On Monday, stocks rose on the White House report that the health of the US President Donald Trump was improving, easing the political uncertainty triggered by his COVID-19 infection.
Michael Schoellhorn, the Airbus CTO, stated that the aviation industry outlook appeared to be worse than expected due to a resurge in coronavirus cases worldwide, as well as renewed travel restrictions.
Deutsche Boerse, the exchange operator, has proposed on Monday to expand the number of firms included in the German DAX index from 30 to 40 units and introduce tougher conditions for the membership.
On Monday, Cineworld announced it would suspend its operations at movie theatres in Britain and the United States, impacting about 45K jobs amid a significant downturn caused by the COVID-19 crisis.