Nasdaq Seeks Mandatory Board Diversity for Listed Companies
Nasdaq is pushing for the more than 3,000 companies listed on its U.S. stock exchange to make their boardrooms less male and white.
Nasdaq is pushing for the more than 3,000 companies listed on its U.S. stock exchange to make their boardrooms less male and white.
Authorities in Spain’s capital have held a ceremony to open part of a 1,000-bed emergency hospital for COVID-19 patients.
American factories grew at a slower pace last month amid concerns that a resurgence in coronavirus cases endanger an economic recovery.
The value that Wall Street places on access to billions of bytes of data, rather than old-school stock picking, became abundantly clear Monday as two of the biggest providers of such information become one in the biggest takeover of the year.
Leaders of the OPEC cartel have adjourned their meeting on future oil production.
Zoom’s videoconferencing service remains a fixture in pandemic life, but its breakneck growth is showing signs of tapering off as investors debate whether the company will be able to build upon its recent success after a vaccine enables people to intermingle again.
A government watchdog has found that the Labor Department’s widely watched weekly unemployment benefits data are providing an inaccurate reading on the number of newly laid off workers because of flaws in the government’s data collection.
A group of Hawaii leaders is launching a campaign Sunday to promote the islands as an appealing location for a remote office with a view.
Britain’s foreign minister says there is only about a week left for the U.K. and the European Union to strike a post-Brexit trade deal, with fishing rights the major obstacle to agreement.
The S&P 500 is closing a shortened session at a record high Friday as investors continue to look forward to the distribution of a COVID-19 vaccine and relief for the economy.