Square Inc. hopes to make sending cash easier by making it as simple as sending an email -- but is it safe?
Verizon reports stronger-than-expected third-quarter earnings and revenue, sending its shares up 3 percent in early trade.
IBM reported a 4 percent drop in third-quarter revenue, worse than expected by Wall Street, amid a decline in hardware and emerging markets even as it beat earnings estimates.
Apple has told manufacturers of its new iPhone 5C that it will cut orders of the smartphone for the final three months of the year.
Twitter revealed Tuesday a tripling in quarterly losses as it prepares to list on the New York Stock Exchange in one of the year's most anticipated IPOs.
BlackBerry publishes an open letter in major publications around the world in a bid to reassure customers that they can count on the distressed smartphone company.
Fashion retailer Burberry says chief creative officer Michael Bailey will take on the additional role of CEO when current chief Angela Ahrendts departs for Apple next year.
Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer's charm offensive has impressed many on Madison Avenue, but getting advertisers to spend more on Yahoo's Web properties won't happen overnight.
Google wants your permission to use your name, photo and product reviews in ads that it sells to businesses.
Apple reportedly has begun snapping up BlackBerry employees near the company's corporate headquarters in Canada.
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.
Consumers are increasingly turning to an unlikely source to secure their homes -- the cable company.
Panasonic will pull out of the plasma television panel business by the end of the financial year to March 2014.
Turns out it's not just Anthony Weiner who's been exposing too much over the Internet. Seven percent of people have shared their Social Security numbers on social media.
Excitement for Twitter's coming IPO is running so that some investors Friday mistook the nearly worthless shares of Tweeter for the "tweeting" site.
A big IPO in less than 140 characters, and customer data is compromised at Adobe. Those stories and more are what's in Friday's Market Minute.
Twitter, a privately held company built on blurbs, has finally laid itself bare in documents that read more like a treatise than a tweet.
Worry over a protracted government shutdown combined with concern about weak hiring combined to push stocks lower Wednesday.
Monsanto reported worse-than-expected losses for its fiscal fourth quarter on Wednesday, due to lower sales of its genetically engineered seeds.
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.
Google's latest offer to modify its Internet search engine offers the prospect of ending a long-running European Union competition probe.
In Washington's budget showdown, both sides are sticking to their guns, as House Republican appear poised to push the government into a shutdown Tuesday over Obamacare.
Seven new midsize cars and SUVs earn "superior" ratings in a new test of high-tech safety features designed to prevent front-end crashes.
Nike earnings just do it, and a leading video game maker withdraws a popular product. Those stories and more are what's in Friday's Market Minute.
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.
A series of tweets by business magnate Martha Stewart about her broken iPad -- which she said was given to her by Apple's founder Steve Jobs -- has goes viral.
Yahoo joins Japan's SoftBank in backing Alibaba Group Holding's unusual planned partnership structure.
Fairfax Financial chief executive Prem Watsa is confident the consortium he leads can find the money to fund its $4.7 billion bid for smartphone maker BlackBerry.
Fairfax Financial Holdings seeks more than $1 billion in equity investments to back its preliminary $4.7 billion plan to acquire BlackBerry.
Oracle's billionaire chief disses a company conference, and Amazon upgrades the Kindle. Those stories and more are what's in Wednesday's Market Minute.
Stocks drifted lower Monday, weighed down by worries about the strength of the U.S. economy and the likelihood of a protracted partisan budget fight in Washington.