The 1941 Atlantic Charter pledged a future of human rights and democracy in the postwar world. India was purposely omitted. Adam Tooze reviews “India at War” by Yasmin Khan and “India’s War” by Srinath Raghavan.
The lawyer for a Chinese company that won a patent ruling against Apple Inc. said his client has no intention of affecting either the U.S. tech giant’s product sales or reputation.
Qualcomm is suing Meizu Technology, a Chinese smartphone maker backed by Alibaba Group Holding, in the latest patent-infringement case involving technology companies.
Central banks in Asia are considering fresh policy moves to shore up their economies after Britain’s vote to leave the European Union.
For China, the U.K. has ballooned in importance in recent years. But in Chinese eyes, Britain is now diminished.
Britain’s vote to leave the European Union marks the start of a period of operational upheaval and heighten financial risks for Asian companies invested there, analysts say.
In the imprecise science of divining China's banking health, the fine print is sometimes worth a closer look than the final statistic.
Stocks in Japan suffered their worst day in five years, leading broad losses in markets across Asia while gold surged as results from the U.K.’s referendum showed the country had voted to leave the European Union.
Shares of HSBC and Standard Chartered plunged in Hong Kong trading as investors weighed the fallout on London-headquartered banks of a U.K. vote to leave the European Union.
Exchange rates remained stable in Hong Kong in the wake of a U.K. vote to leave the European Union, the chief executive of the city’s foreign-exchange regulator said.
Hong Kong is on track to contend as the world’s top IPO market this year, but the big deals aren’t paying off for investors and bankers are tapping Chinese money to get them done.
Deadly downpours, hailstorms and a tornado killed 98 people in eastern China on Thursday, local authorities said. The extreme weather struck the coastal city of Yancheng in Jiangsu province.
Corrections & Amplifications for the edition of June 24, 2016.
A trip through Chinatown’s markets with Valerie Imbruce, author of ‘From Farm to Canal Street: Chinatown’s Alternative Food Network in the Global Marketplace.’
Stocks in Japan drifted higher Thursday and the Hong Kong market notched its fifth consecutive day of gains, as U.K. voters began to cast ballots on whether their nation should remain part of the European Union.
Russian President Vladimir Putin will try to bolster trade and economic ties when he visits China on Saturday to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, as Russia’s economy struggles amid Western sanctions and low oil prices.
Ride a high-tech version of Pirates of the Caribbean or play Indiana Jones at Camp Discovery. An on-the-ground report from Shanghai Disneyland.
Alibaba’s founder talks tough on counterfeits, but not always.
LinkedIn has found rare success in China for a Western tech firm thanks to its willingness to censor content, while its new owner Microsoft has faced challenges there.
Chinese travel website Qunar Cayman Islands said it received a buyout offer—the latest in a string of U.S.-listed Chinese companies to get going-private proposals.