Later today, the US Senate will ballot on the President's pick for the position of the US Department of Education leader. At least 50 Senate members are set to vote against the nominee.
On Tuesday, the American software corporation Autodesk confirmed that the current company's Chief Executive Officer Carl Bass would resign on February 8, 2017.
The German carmaker confirmed it would pay around $477.7M to settle a case over water damage that may have harmed electrical parts of around 318K luxury vehicles in the US.
On Tuesday, Theresa May's spokesperson stated that the PM would visit China later this year to strengthen trade ties and gain overseas support before the UK leaves the EU.
In a conversation over the phone, the German Chancellor Angela Merkel urged Vladimir Putin to call on pro-Russian separatists to end violence in eastern Ukraine.
Dubai and IBM are eager to team up for the new blockchain computer technology project designed for money transfer and goods tracking.
The US trade gap narrowed 3.2% to $44.3B in the final month of 2017, as exports hit their highest in more than one and a half year, the Commerce Department reported on Tuesday.
On Tuesday, the Center for Media and Democracy said it would file a lawsuit against Scott Pruitt, Trump's pick to lead the EPA, to reveal details of his communication with energy companies.
Tobacco corporations may completely replace cigarettes with the new "less-harmful" products as many people have already abandoned traditional smoking.
Turkish Islamist hackers assumed responsibility for cyber attacks that took down the Austrian parliament website on Sunday.
The website of the Austrian parliament was temporary unavailable on Sunday as its server experienced the 20-minute cyber attacks with no data leak detected.
On Monday, the US House passed a bill intended to receive a warrant to search old e-mails from tech companies, putting its privacy at risk.
Fiat Chrysler reaffirmed that their diesel vehicles fully met emission requirements as the French government intended to submit the case to the court.
On Tuesday, the opponents will bring forward arguments in the US Court of Appeals over Donald Trump's travel ban maintenance.
Judicial sources said that the French ex-President Nicolas Sarkozy would face trial in an illegal campaign financing in 2012, adding that another 13 people would also stand trial.
A man attempted to set himself on fire with gasoline inside the Grand Mosque in Mecca, but he was arrested timely before the incident.
Chief Executive of Deutsche Boerse Carsten Kengeter was backed by the company's board on Tuesday as they claimed her talks with the London Stock Exchange did not occur in 2015.
Fujitsu's biggest share-holder will sell a large part of its shares in the company in a step to reduce the companies' cross-shareholdings.
Despite the Philippines' President ordering an „all-out war" on communist rebels, there is still hope that peace talks could end the conflict, the Defense Minister claimed on Tuesday.
Honda and Hitachi Automotive are planning to develop a joint venture with the purpose of making and producing petrol-electric hybrid motors and electric vehicles.
French bank BNP Paribas SA reported the net profit surged to €1.44B in Q4, from €665M a year ago. In turn, revenue showed growth 2% to €10.6B.
The Reserve Bank of Australia has left interest rates unchanged at a record low 1.50% as expected Tuesday. The rate held at this level since August.
SpaceX is planning to launch Falcon 9 rockets every two -three weeks, hitting its fastest launch rate since it first started production in 2010.
SK Hynix, one of the world's largest chipmaker, has submitted a bid to acquire 20% stake in Toshiba Corp's computer-chip business.