On Tuesday, Tesla stated it had no agreement signed with the Chinese battery maker Tianjin Lishen on supplying batteries for the electric carmakers new factory in Shanghai.
The industrial gases titan Linde is planning to launch a $6.0B worth share buyback and is seeking to acquire up to 15% of the company's outstanding shares in the time period of May 1, 2019 - February 1, 2021.
On Tuesday, official Chinese data revealed that the growth of the GDP has declined due to the services and agriculture sectors. Meanwhile, construction has recovered.
The world's largest drone maker the Chinese SZ DJI Technology Company revealed that the company's employees were inflating costs for the purpose of personal gain. In total the inflation amassed to $150 million during 2018.
After months of delay Amazon launched its in-house delivery and fulfilment network in the country of Brazil. The delay was caused by a complex tax system and issues with local logistics.
On Tuesday, Reuters revealed that, although various macroeconomic indicators show that the Chinese economy is slowing down, many funds are investing in Chinese bonds.
Private equity firm Apollo Global Management was in advanced talks to buy the EU largest plastics packaging producer RPC Group for more than $3.8B, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Logitech International's net income was above expectations in the third quarter, as the mobile speaker and computer peripheral producer got momentum from lingering strong expansion in gaming hardware.
More than a third of Japan's firms aimed to raise capex in the fiscal year begging in April, while others were worried on the impact over spending plans of the trade war between the US and China, a survey revealed.
The social media major Facebook is set to hire an extra 1K people at the company's international headquarters in Dublin in 2019, the second jobs announcement from the US multinational in Ireland.
Asset managers, such as BlackRock, Balyasny Capital and AQR Capital, announced job cuts in January, bracing for more layoffs due to turmoil on the financial markets, financial analyst Kyle Sanders stated on Monday.
Tesla received a green light for its crucial Model 3 vehicle in Europe, eliminating the final obstacle for the EU introduction of the luxury electric car expected next month.
On Monday, the French data protection regulator fined Google $57M for violating the European online privacy rules, the biggest such fine imposed against the US tech giant.
The private equity companies, Advent and Cinven, have tied up to bid for Nestle's skin health unit in an auction, which could value the firm at about $7.0B, sources reported on Monday.
On Monday, an oil price increase was attributed by the financial media to a rumoured OPEC production cut being negotiated among the oil producing countries.
The biggest mobile operator of Zimbabwe, Econet Wirwless, has restored all social media and internet services in the country. Previously the services were off due to a government order that was overruled by the country's court system.
Officials from Honduras on Monday sent various suggestions to the WTO to tweak its rules to resolve the current judicial crisis and trade wars. The tweak would only influence how trade complaints are processed.
On Monday, the Economy Minister of Italy Giovanni Tria announced that the recommended policies of the IMF are posing risk to the world economy.
Lockheed Martin is seeing a potential exports of 200 F-16 fighter jets worth $20B from India's assembly line, the company's top executive stated on Monday.
On Monday, the International Monetary Fund has trimmed its global economic growth outlook for the next two years amid trade disputes that are hard to resolve and weakness in Europe.
The London Stock Exchange operator is eyeing a bid for Oslo Bors; an interest that could potentially trigger the bidding war between the LSE and the Norwegian firm's first bidder Euronext.
Fawaz Alhokair Group's shopping mall unit filed for an initial public offering in Riyadh in this year's Q2, planning to sell about 30% to investors, according to Reuters.
The Greek Parliament is set to vote on a deal this Thursday to terminate the long-lasting name dispute over Macedonia between Skopje and Athens.
The activist investor Elliott called in Telecom Italia's board to split its fixed-line network, as the country's regulator had given a thumbs-down to a plan by Vivendi to establish the wholly-owned subsidiary instead.