What's News: Business & Finance -- WSJ
March 30 2017 - 3:02AM
Dow Jones News
The Trump administration is signaling to Congress that it would
seek mostly modest changes to Nafta in coming negotiations with
Mexico and Canada.
Westinghouse Electric filed for chapter 11, setting off a
showdown between the nuclear power company's Japanese parent and a
major U.S. utility.
Margin debt climbed to a record in February, a fresh sign of
bullishness for investors trying to navigate the political and
economic crosscurrents driving markets.
The Nasdaq rose, posting its fourth straight session of gains,
while the Dow lost 42.18 points to 20659.32.
Samsung introduced a new flagship smartphone, its first product
launch following last year's Galaxy Note 7 debacle.
Current and former Citizens branch employees claim that
information about some meetings with customers was fabricated as
they struggled to meet the bank's goals.
The LSE's wager on passive investing stands to give it an edge
over Deutsche Börse as the two go it alone after European
regulators blocked their tie-up.
Regulators plan to reverse an Obama-era rule that prevented
major TV-station owners from buying stations or readily selling
themselves.
A police report shed light on last week's crash involving Uber's
self-driving vehicle, revealing that it was hit after entering an
intersection on a yellow light.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 30, 2017 02:47 ET (06:47 GMT)
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