Samsung Blames Galaxy Note 7 Overheating on Problems at Suppliers 
 

The South Korean smartphone giant says manufacturing and battery design problems at two suppliers led to the recall of 2.5 million devices.

 
United Airlines Says Flight Problem Resolved 
 

United Continental Holdings Inc. had a computer issue Sunday evening that caused it to ask the Federal Aviation Administration to put into effect a "ground stop" for its arriving and departing flights.

 
Yahoo Faces SEC Probe Over Data Breaches 
 

U.S. authorities are investigating whether Yahoo's two massive data breaches should have been reported sooner to investors, according to people familiar with the matter.

 
Singapore Exchange to Launch LNG Index 
 

The Singapore Exchange is set to start up an index that will track the price of liquefied natural gas in the Middle East and Indian markets, the latest move by exchanges looking to establish a benchmark for this rapidly growing source of energy.

 
The Case for a Less Chipper Intel 
 

The chip maker's stock has languished as data-center growth slows. A more realistic goal should help.

 
Alibaba Needs Great Results, Not Just Good Ones 
 

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has a high bar to clear when it releases its quarterly report on Tuesday.

 
Abu Dhabi Creates $125 Billion Investment Firm 
 

The emirate has completed the merger of two of its sovereign-wealth funds, as it looks to combine state assets to cut costs in response to falling oil revenues.

 
J.P. Morgan Joins Push for Nontransparent, Active ETFs 
 

J.P. Morgan Chase is joining a long line of asset managers backing a new type of exchange-traded fund that mimics active strategies but keeps its investments.

 
A+E Networks Chief Tests Limits in Bid to Revive Channels' Fortunes 
 

A+E Networks, run by CEO Nancy Dubuc, is a prime example of a mid-tier cable company under pressure to revamp its brands to survive an age of slimmer television channel bundles and on-demand streaming services.

 
Snapchat Parent Plans to Pay Banks 2.5% of IPO Proceeds 
 

The banks managing Snap's initial public offering are set to share 2.5% of the money raised in the deal, a relatively low rate that indicates the popular technology company's leverage in dictating the terms of its public debut.

 
 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

January 22, 2017 23:00 ET (04:00 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.