International Markets

International Markets Articles

Industry watchers and alternative energy investors are wondering which markets will be the next major growth engine. It turns out that India could be the next major growth catalyst.
Air pollution in China's largest cities has contributed to widespread health problems and may restrict both manufacturing and the growth of a car industry.
Argentina has had its share of financial issues, but now we have seen a serious sentiment change for Argentina out of the team at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
CEO Jeff Immelt continues to refashion General Electric as an industrial conglomerate with less emphasis on its once-booming financial business.
BMW disclosed its 2014 results Thursday morning, and the company said that it had its fifth consecutive record-setting year.
The U.S. Export-Import Bank dodged a bullet last September when its charter was temporarily reauthorized at the last minute.
Last year, the leading U.S. exporter of weapons to the rest of the world was Boeing, according to IHS.
Saudi Arabia has replaced India as the leading arms importer in the world, according to an IHS analyst.
The United States exported over $23 billion in arms to the rest of the world in 2014, more than double the total exported by second place Russia.
ThinkstockBerkshire Hathaway Inc. (NYSE: BRK-A) has made some interesting news this week. The conglomerate under Warren Buffett has successfully borrowed over $3 billion in new note and bond...
Owning a few top European stocks in a well-balanced portfolio makes good sense at this juncture, especially with the U.S. markets hovering near all-time highs.
In Spain and Greece, about one in four adults are still unemployed, which makes a full recovery of their economies impossible.
Janet Yellen, chair of the Federal Reserve, is delivering more good news to the financial markets in her Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress.
Shares of BMW and Daimler have risen sharply in the past 12 months, while shares of Ford and GM have lagged.
As the world’s population and wealth grow over the next 20 years, so too does demand for energy, and most of the growth comes in emerging economies.