Apple reportedly has begun snapping up BlackBerry employees near the company's corporate headquarters in Canada.
JPMorgan Chase, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, reported a rare quarterly loss after incurring $9.2 billion in legal expenses.
Sony says it will move cautiously in tackling key overseas smartphone markets as it strives to become the third-biggest smartphone maker in the world.
KFC sales have tanked in China, and they're losing ground in the U.S. too. But its Yum Brands sibling Taco Bell is on a roll. So why not do at one what worked for the other?
It may have sold 109 million hot dog combos and 60 million rotisserie chickens in the past year, but Costco isn't performing as well as the market expects it to.
Why did Jack Dorsey, who has been chairman of Twitter since October 2008, give fellow cofounder Ev Williams voting control of his stake in the company?
Men's Wearhouse rejects smaller rival Jos. A. Bank's $2.3 billion takeover offer, saying it significantly undervalues the company.
Panasonic will pull out of the plasma television panel business by the end of the financial year to March 2014.
From a Twitter's widely anticipated IPO reveal to a reputation-burning engine fire for Tesla, here's a rundown of the week's best and worst moves in the business world.
Excitement for Twitter's coming IPO is running so that some investors Friday mistook the nearly worthless shares of Tweeter for the "tweeting" site.
JPMorgan Chase Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon has given up the title of chairman of the company's main bank subsidiary to conform with a new internal policy on multiple roles.
Twitter, a privately held company built on blurbs, has finally laid itself bare in documents that read more like a treatise than a tweet.
Monsanto reported worse-than-expected losses for its fiscal fourth quarter on Wednesday, due to lower sales of its genetically engineered seeds.
New York state's attorney general says he's suing Wells Fargo to force compliance with terms of last year's national mortgage case settlement.
Three of the top 20 investors in Microsoft reportedly are lobbying the board to press for Bill Gates to step down as chairman of the company he co-founded 38 years ago.
Microsoft has shut down MSN TV, and while most people could care less, there is a group of people for whom it's a really big deal.
The new owner of J.C. Penney's former outlet store business says it will close all 15 locations amid a steep drop in sales.
The shutdown of the federal government prompts the Justice Department to ask for a delay in court proceedings over the merger of US Airways and AMR.
Walgreen's fiscal fourth-quarter earnings soared 86 percent, as the nation's largest drugstore chain booked gains from its stake in Alliance Boots.
Google's latest offer to modify its Internet search engine offers the prospect of ending a long-running European Union competition probe.
From earnings out of a pharmacy leader to those from a controversial farm supplier, here are some of the items that will help shape the week that lies ahead on Wall Street.
From fallout from an excessively generous golden parachute at Nokia to applause for a new cheap Kindle, here's a rundown of the week's best and worst moves in business world.
McDonald's says it will offer healthy options as part of its popular value meals, letting customers choose a side salad, fruit or vegetables instead of french fries.
BlackBerry reported a huge quarterly loss Friday, days after accepting its largest shareholder's tentative $4.7 billion bid to take it out of the public eye.
Yahoo joins Japan's SoftBank in backing Alibaba Group Holding's unusual planned partnership structure.
Yelp has been one of the market's hottest stocks lately, but as many as 20% of the reviews on the site may be fakes. Will the gains continue if the reviews can't be trusted?
The struggling Postal Service is seeking a 3-cent increase in the cost of mailing a letter, raising the price of a first-class stamp to 49 cents.
Fairfax Financial Holdings seeks more than $1 billion in equity investments to back its preliminary $4.7 billion plan to acquire BlackBerry.
JPMorgan Chase has expanded negotiations with the Justice Department by offering to pay $3 billion to settle a wide range of ongoing investigations, a report says.
Chipotle's testing a premium coffee brand, and it's also serving breakfast out of one of its airport locations. Could breakfast burritos be in the fast casual chain's future?
TD Bank will pay $52.5 million to settle U.S. civil regulatory charges that it failed to report suspicious activity in accounts linked to a Ponzi scheme by a Florida lawyer.