England had a rude awakening this week, as the United Kingdom was transported back in time to one of the most tumultuous years in its history.
Our daily email brings you smart and engaging news and analysis on the biggest stories in business and finance. For free.
On Tuesday, two separate antitrust class lawsuits were filed against Microsoft and Apple in the United Kingdom.
Of 12 major developed-market central banks, eight are in rate-cutting mode, with Australia, Norway, Japan, and Taiwan the odd men out.
UK officials are reportedly weighing hiking taxes on gambling, and Macau continues to wean itself off the industry.
Greece’s government put new labor laws into effect that mean workers can be asked to work a six-day workweek.
The United Kingdom’s newly empowered Labour has promised big shifts in the UK’s energy policy. But will it deliver?
As the AI market matures, there is a stark realization in public sectors elsewhere that this is America’s AI world.
You’d think the biggest election year in history would be good news for pollsters. In the case of YouGov, you’d be wrong.
Institutional investors, including so-called US mega landlords, have increasingly been gaining dominance in the UK’s rental market.
Across the globe, a record 128,000 millionaires are expected to relocate this year, according to a new report.
Europe’s various far-right parties increased their control of the EU’s parliament to 25% from the roughly 20% since elections in 2019.
The EU has a 10% tariff on EVs imported from China, but it could soon increase to 25% or 30%.
UK stocks have been outperforming US stocks on a broad index-based level for the past seven weeks, but this isn’t a case of a UK renaissance.
The US’ often neglected railways might be on track for better days as the country pumps billions of dollars into outdated infrastructure.
The tight supply of both beans meant trading prices were extremely volatile, and the result was that cocoa almost tripled in price last year.
A portfolio doesn’t have to be just stocks and bonds. You can add something a little more fun, say your favorite vintage baseball cards.
Which way Trump will lean on the issue is difficult to say, though tech companies have worked hard to curry the incoming president’s favor.