New York Rep. Anthony Weiner admitted sending sexually suggestive photographs or messages to six women online over three years but said he doesn't plan to resign from Congress because of the scandal.
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Banks, investors and companies are scrambling to cope with uncertainty caused by regulators' delays in fleshing out the Dodd-Frank financial-overhaul law.
Apple moved to compel consumers to buy more of its devices—with software and online services designed to more closely tie its gadgets together.
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RSA Security is offering to replace its well-known SecurID tokens in the wake of a breach of its security systems at Lockheed.
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International Paper offered to acquire Temple-Inland for about $3.38 billion in cash, disclosing the bid publicly Monday after being rejected by the rival cardboard-box producer in private discussions.
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Bill Gross, likely the world's best-known bond-fund manager, has staked his reputation—and more than a little cash—on a bet against U.S. Treasury debt. It hasn't been working out well for him.
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BP PLC signaled it is beginning preparations to sell part of its stake in its conflict-plagued Russian venture TNK-BP to OAO Rosneft in a bid to salvage a landmark cooperation deal with the Russian state oil company.
Stocks dropped for a fourth straight day, as concerns over an economic slowdown continued to weigh on investor sentiment.
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The Medicaid provision of the health law spells the death knell for competition among the states.
New York restaurateur Danny Meyer acquired his equine appreciation while growing up in the 1970s during the sport's golden era.
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Japan disclosed that its nuclear accident was more severe in its first days than it had previously admitted—casting new light on how the disaster briefly strained relations with the U.S.
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Santorum entered the race for the GOP presidential nomination, staking out ground as a fiscal conservative who would overhaul Social Security and Medicare.
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A leading Chinese government newspaper lashed out at Google, saying its allegations of China-based hacking were an attempt to spark disputes over Internet security between China and the U.S.
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Volvo Car's cautious European CEO and its new hard-charging Chinese owner are striving to reconcile differing visions and management styles.
In the first quarter of this year, George Soros dumped around $800 million of gold. Should you follow his lead? Not this time, writes Matthew Lynn.
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The presidential election of 2012 will be largely about the economy, unemployment in particular, but the deeper problem is a decade of sluggish growth.
Once a year, the global energy powerhouses that control the 40 million barrels of crude stored in Cushing, Okla., shift their competition to a dusty field on the edge of town to smoke brisket for residents.
Do the wealthy take more risks because they are wealthy, or are they wealthy because they take more risks? A new study suggests larger wealth may be more of a cause of risk-taking than a result.
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Our ocean frontiers are disappearing, and it is up to us to conserve the most important wild areas that remain.
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In today's pictures, hotel maids band together in New York, Yemenis celebrate their president's departure, a teary-eyed veteran remembers D-Day and more.
Israeli forces fired on protesters trying to overrun the Golan Heights from Syria, killing at least 23 people in fresh protests that marked the anniversary of the start of the Six-Day War.