Jean-Dominique Senard, Renault's Chairman, has vowed on Tuesday to bring the alliance with the Japanese carmaker Nissan back on track in 2020, after it was hit by the ex-head Carlos Ghosn's arrest.
On Monday, SoftBank Group made an offer to WeWork and the company's shareholders, worth about $10B, under the takeover plan to leave WeWork afloat; a move that might lead to Chairman Adam Neumann's exit.
Rebolut, the digital banking app, is set to launch its cards issuing in the United States by this year-end through its partnership with the payments company Mastercard, both firms announced on Tuesday.
Yuri Ushakov, the Kremlin spokesperson, said that the Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan are set to discuss Turkey's military operation in Syria on Tuesday.
On Monday, SAP Business Software group announced that it had struck a three-year agreement with Microsoft to help its largest business clients to run their operations into the cloud.
According to a statement from the Scope Ratings, UniCredit has transferred about $6.8 billion in bad loans to a securitisation vehicle.
On Monday, Cardinal Health Inc, AmerisourceBergen Corp, Teva Pharmaceutical Ltd and McKesson Corp have reached a $260M legal settlement over their role in the opioid addiction epidemic in the US.
On Monday, the Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri approved a wide range of economic reforms amid anti-government rallies.
The UK PM Boris Johnson would try again to table his withdrawal agreement to a vote in the House of Commons on Monday. However, it is unclear if the speaker, John Bercow, would permit such a vote.
On Monday, Bank Of America announced it was planning an expansion of its zero-dollar online trading among all Preferred Rewards programme's customers, as well as commission cuts for others, after several online brokers had made similar moves.
Xiaomi Corp, the Chinese smartphone maker, is planning to roll out over 10 5G smartphones next year, the company's CEO Lei Jun stated on Sunday, during the World Internet Conference.
The EDPS, the EU data watchdog, stated on Monday that Microsoft's contracts with the bloc's institutions did not provide complete data protection in line with the European Union's law.
Siemens Gamesa, the German-Spanish wind energy firm, has agreed to acquire the selected EU assets from Senvion, the struggling German wind turbine producer, in a deal valued at €200M.
On Monday, oil prices plunged 30 cents to $59.12 a barrel on growing concerns over slackening global demand, outweighing the bullish signals from the EU, Reuters reported.
On Monday, Unizo Holdings, the Japanese hotel chain, stated it would continue holding talks with the Blackstone Group, which submitted its buyout offer last week despite previous rejections.
Thomson Reuters Corp is looking for a new Chief Executive Officer, the successor to Jim Smith, after he oversaw the majority of stake sale in the news agency's financial-data business to Blackstone Group's consortium last year.
On Monday, a business software giant SAP claimed that it has reached a new three-year partnership with Microsoft on a business enterprise cloud migration.
The National Bureau of Statistics reported on Monday that the prices on newly build residential buildings have increased by 0.5% in September.
In a speech at Georgetown University the Facebook's Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg defended the company's approach to free speech and political advertising.
On Monday, the Pound Sterling declined from a five-month high against the US Dollar after the UK Parliament blocked a meaningful vote on Brexit deal.
On Sunday, the President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that he expects the US to abide by its promises and not to stall the Syrian peace deal.
Mick Mulvaney, the White House acting Chief of Staff, said on Sunday that he did not offer to quit over the quid pro quo flap.
The head of the Bank of Thailand, Veerathai Santiprabhob, warned on Sunday that the policy of ultra-low interest rates and enormous capital flows represented a systemic risk for emerging economies.
Mervyn Gibson, the head of Northern Ireland's Orange Order, stated on Sunday that he did not want to see violent protests against Boris Johnson's deal.