Most European banks survived their regulators’ stress test, with only a clutch of lenders seen struggling to ride out an economic meltdown.
Juggling terror threats from Islamic State and Kurdish separatists, Turkey’s vast intelligence service struggled to make sense of clues before plotters sprung to action on July 15.
A series of violent attacks has highlighted the security implications of the massive influx of migrants—and the challenge of getting people deemed not in need of protection to actually leave.
Pope Francis paid silent tribute to the victims of Auschwitz on Friday, becoming the third pontiff in a row to visit the largest and most notorious Nazi concentration camp.
The eurozone economy slowed in the three months to June, largely driven by a weaker-than-expected performance in France.
Plans to build a controversial $23.7 billion nuclear-power project in the U.K. were unexpectedly delayed after the government postponed making a final decision until the fall.
The European Union imposed anti-dumping tariffs on certain Chinese steel imports, as the bloc steps up efforts to protect European steelmakers struggling with overcapacity.
Swiss bank UBS gave a gloomy outlook for its future even though it posted a second-quarter profit that exceeded expectations, citing uncertainty and turbulent markets.
Tom Kalaris, one of the “four musketeers” at Barclays during the Bob Diamond era, is to return to the wealth management world with Saranac, a new boutique with a host of executives from the world’s financial giants.
Banco Popular Español fired its chief executive as the bank prepares to spend billions of euros in newly-raised funds to clean up its massive pile of soured property loans.
Norway, one of Europe’s smaller markets, boasts one of the top-performing major currencies this year. That is largely because its economy offers something hard to find these days: inflation.
With British nationalism on the rise in England, we tasted our way through four of London’s oldest, most gustatorily patriotic restaurants—and learned to eat “stewed cheese” along the way. Here’s your guide.
The mushrooming of small-scale terror attacks has allowed Islamic State and its adherents to keep Europeans on edge without having to train and equip teams to pull off highly sophisticated operations.
France looked for other ISIS followers who may have been involved in planning a priest’s killing while the French prime minister admitted there were failures in tracking the two known terrorist suspects before they attacked.
Major media outlets, under pressure from politicians, have decided to censor their own reporting about terror assaults in a bid to prevent the glorification of attackers who could inspire other radicals.
The Swiss National Bank reported considerably stronger profits for the first half of this year compared with the same period last year on the back of gains in its foreign currency holdings and gold.
The Bank of Russia kept interest rates unchanged on Friday but promised to consider lowering the cost of borrowing in the future.
Spain’s acting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said Thursday he had accepted a directive from King Felipe VI to seek a confidence vote from parliament to lead a government.
Turkey’s government tightened its control over the military, intensifying its moves to consolidate power following a failed coup.
Russian and Syrian officials said opposition fighters and civilians in the besieged city of Aleppo were being offered safe passage out—an announcement met with skepticism.