International Markets

International Markets Articles

In a clash that has been brewing for months, air carriers get a chance this week to battle head-on at the International Air Transport Association annual meeting in Miami.
ThinkstockMany investors, economists and people in general have watched the longstanding woes in Europe. The people inside Europe have lived through these woes as well, and some nations know how to...
Year to date, the Shanghai Composite index is up a whopping 53%, prompting worries that major Chinese indexes may be overheating.
Greece has notified the IMF that it plans to bundle all of its June payments, which means the IMF and other creditors will not receive payments until June 30.
Why do the Europeans, and anyone else for that matter, continue to play this ongoing shell game with Greece?
In another sign that the largest engines of the world's economy have faltered, the OECD has slashed its forecast for global GDP for this year and for 2016.
Annual global Internet traffic will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 26% between 2014 and 2019, says the Visual Networking Index.
Based on a study of 350 companies in 11 countries, the average data breach costs a company an average of $3.79 million, or $154 for every lost or stolen record.
24/7 Wall St. has laid out 10 different reasons why the Federal Reserve is unlikely to hike interest rates too far or too fast.
Deflation has started to take hold in the United Kingdom and threatens several other large economies.
Saudi exports dropped almost 6% year-over-year in 2014 to an average of around 7.1 million barrels a day, the lowest level in three years.
Venezuela's economy suffers from an expanding recession. It is an economy, and in some ways a country, falling apart.
While the euro area and several countries did well in the first quarter, Greece moved back into a recession, highlighting how difficult it will be for the nation to pay off its debts.
Airbus has filed a complaint against the German government, alleging that it complied with requests by the U.S. National Security Agency to spy on European countries and businesses.
Moody's downgrade of Greek debt barely matters since the fate of the nation's debt is in a very few hands.