Qatar Airways decided to abandon its plan to acquire a stake in American Airlines, indicating that buying as much as 10% in the USA's biggest airline no longer met their objectives.
The Pentagon reported on Wednesday that two US troops were killed after a suicide bombing attack on a NATO convoy near Kandahar province in Afghanistan.
The Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has replaced the heads of the Turkish Armed Forces that consist of land, naval and air forces.
Apple's stronger-than-expected quarterly figures pushed iPhone's shares to a record high, helping the Dow Jones Industrial Average Index to pass the 22,000-point mark.
Sources close to the matter reported that Hasbro, the third largest toy maker in the world, ended talks to buy Lionsgate Entertainment, an American entertainment and media company.
The EIA reported that US crude oil inventories dropped 1.5M barrels in the week ended July 28, compared to the prior week's plunge of 7.2M barrels, while analysts anticipated a 3.2M-barrel decline.
ADP reported on Wednesday that US private companies created 178K new jobs last month, following June's upwardly revised gain of 191K, whereas analysts expected the US private sector to add 187K new positions.
Markit reported that its PMI for the UK construction sector dropped to 51.9 in July, down from the preceding month's 54.8, whereas analysts anticipated a slighter fall to 54.3.
The mother company of Tim Hortons and Burger King Restaurant Brands International has booked a $1.13 billion profit in the second quarter of 2017.
Officially ten Russian servicemen have died in Syria in 2017. However, based on accounts of other sources, Reuters has announced that the real number is near 40.
Austria launched an investigation into two companies amid suspicion of fraud, financial crimes and environmental offences related to the Volkswagen's emissions scandal.
The Kremlin said the Washington's statements on new sanctions against Russia were contradictory and it was unclear whether the President Donald Trump would sign them into law.
Three people got missing after a tour boat named Anemore sank off the Turkish province's coast of Mugla in the Mediterranean on Wednesday, while the rest eight people had been rescued.
On Wednesday, Germany's ministers and carmakers will hold a meeting to find ways to tackle inner-city pollution and prevent bans on diesel vehicles as they seek to restore tarnished reputation of the German car industry.
Britain's Prince Philip is set for his final solo appearance at Buckingham Palace's parade of Royal Marines on Wednesday ahead of his retirement from public life.
On Tuesday, a suicide attack hit Shi'ite mosque in the Afghani city of Herat, leaving more than 29 civilians dead and over 64 wounded.
Barclays have signed a lease for additional space in Dublin. This follows in the aftermath of the Brexit, as British banks move away from London.
A radioactive incident, which occurred in Japan in June has been deemed as a Level 2 radioactive incident on the international scale.
British Airways reported on Wednesday that it had solved the problem with its systems that did not allow passengers to check-in on the company's flights from the Heathrow airport.
A former official of the US Justice Department Greg Andres joined the Special Counsel Robert Mueller's team on Tuesday, which investigates Russian interference in the last year's Presidential election.
The US Senate confirmed on Tuesday the ex-Justice Department lawyer Christopher Wray would lead FBI as its Chief after about three months the previous head James Comey was fired by the President Donald Trump.
On Tuesday, Apple shares surged to their record-high of $159.10 after the company posted better-than-expected iPhone sales, also hitting a milestone of 1.2B iPhones sold.
The Brazilian former President Inacio Lula da Silva is set to face his sixth trial on the corruption charges as he allegedly accepted $320K in refurbishing, sending the country's economy into a political chaos.
On Wednesday, the Parliament of Papua New Guinea re-elected the Prime Minister Peter O'Neill, finishing the chaotic election campaign clouded by violence that was feared to continue due to voter unrest.