Ted Cruz did what he had to do. Donald Trump fell well short of the shock-and-awe moment he hoped would set up a blitz through the rest of the country. Marco Rubio bought himself a seat at the big table. And Hillary Clinton flirted all night with disaster, writes Gerald F. Seib.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton barely survived a surprisingly stiff challenge from Sen. Bernie Sanders in the Iowa caucuses as the two candidates arrived in New Hampshire Tuesday morning to begin a weeklong dash to the nation’s first primary. 308
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz outmuscled businessman Donald Trump to win the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucuses, cementing his status as the leading alternative to the Republican front-runner. Marco Rubio nipped at Trump’s heels. 586
China National Chemical Corp. is nearing a deal to buy Syngenta that values the Swiss pesticide company at roughly $43 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.
Stocks around the world fell as renewed weakness in oil prices triggered a slide in energy shares. The Dow industrials declined about 1% shortly after the open.
BP’s earnings collapsed in 2015, amounting to a full-year loss of $5.2 billion that illustrates the toll a 20-month slide in oil prices is taking on the world’s energy industry.
Exxon Mobil, the largest U.S. oil company, said its fourth-quarter profit tumbled 58% as depressed oil prices continue to hamper its exploration and production business.
Pfizer on Tuesday reported better-than-expected results for its fourth quarter, but offered soft guidance for 2016.
Profit at the Japanese videogame giant falls 36% as a lack of blockbuster game titles undercuts sales of the hand-held 3DS device.
Boeing is telling customers it may be ready to deliver its fuel-efficient 737 Max as much as six months early, avoiding the delays that plagued other recent offerings, amid tough competition from Airbus’s A320neo.
U.S. river infrastructure is about to be flooded with federal cash, even as cheap natural gas, stricter power-plant emissions rules and a weak steel market have gutted coal demand, and with it traffic on the waterways.
Beijing is reducing to 20% from 25% the down-payment requirements for first-time home buyers in many Chinese cities, a new move to shore up the slowing economy.
Negative interest rates by themselves can’t save Japan. But they do have consequences—especially for real estate.
The latest round of penalties over “dark pools” highlights how reliant banks and exchange operators have become on business from high-frequency traders—even on platforms that promised to blunt their advantage.
Shares tumbled 8% after the Swiss bank said its wealth-management unit was drained of billions of dollars in assets in the fourth quarter.
The European Union has published proposals intended to address British Prime Minister David Cameron’s demands for a changed relationship, marking a key step in the fight over whether Britain will remain in the bloc.
Beijing is increasingly reaching across mainland China’s borders to apprehend and repatriate political opponents and activists in a way that undermines international law, lawyers and rights groups say.
Beijing is reviving the ritualized public confession, often as a nationally televised affair. For one British corporate investigator, it was a harrowing experience.
Israel’s military lifted restrictions on Palestinian access to Ramallah, the day after it curbed movement in and out of the West Bank city amid concerns over a Palestinian attack in Israel.
The builder of the world’s future tallest tower hopes it will redefine the cityscape in this desert region and project the Saudi kingdom’s ambition to be a global powerhouse.
When things go wrong, communication and resolution programs help patients get an apology, an explanation and, sometimes, monetary compensation.
A Nordic ski enthusiast learned the skate-skiing technique for a faster-paced workout on Minnesota’s snowy trails.
Baxter International said its profit fell less than expected as the hospital products manufacturer saw increased demand but also currency headwinds.
Hints of heart trouble sometimes surface weeks before the life-threatening event, a new study finds. Many times, victims either failed to recognize the symptoms or ignored them—in most cases until it was too late. 53
A filmmaker and theorist whose talent was as evident on the screen as it was on the page.