Nvidia Grapples With Crypto-Mining Fallout 
 

The previous stockpiling habits of cryptocurrency miners have left Nvidia to battle with excess graphics-card inventory.

 
Google's Cloud-Computing Boss Steps Down 
 

Google said its top cloud-computing executive is departing the company and will be replaced by a former executive of business software rival Oracle Corp.

 
PG&E Shares Surge on Hopes of State Support 
 

Shares of PG&E opened sharply higher on investor hopes that California officials would move to rescue the utility from wildfire-related liabilities that threaten to plunge it into bankruptcy.

 
Vivendi Rides Spotify's Coattails 
 

Spotify has resurrected the music industry but Vivendi's shareholders may be the biggest winners.

 
Viacom Expects 2019 Revenue Growth 
 

Viacom said it expects revenue to grow in the 2019 fiscal year as the company augments its pay-TV business with production and licensing fees from streaming-video services.

 
Companies Start to Sweat Prospect of No-Deal Brexit as Deadline Looms 
 

With Prime Minister Theresa May's government in turmoil over the terms of a Brexit agreement, the prospect of "no deal" is getting real-spooking companies big and small, including some far from Britain's shores.

 
Judge Grants CNN's Motion to Restore Jim Acosta's White House Press Pass 
 

A federal judge granted an emergency motion to restore the White House press credential of CNN correspondent Jim Acosta-a victory for the network in a closely watched press-freedom case.

 
Telecom Italia Tug-of-War Explained 
 

Telecom Italia's main shareholder Vivendi and activist investor Elliott Management have been exchanging blows in a battle for influence at the telecommunications company. Dow Jones explains what's at stake.

 
Crashed Lion Air Plane's Missing Black Box Goes Silent 
 

Investigators searching for a black box of a crashed Lion Air jet believe its locator beacon is broken and are preparing new equipment to visually scour the muddy floor of the Java Sea.

 
Southwest Air Replaced Flight-Control Sensors of the Kind Implicated in Lion Air Crash 
 

During the three weeks before Lion Air Flight 610 plunged into waters off Indonesia, Southwest Airlines replaced two malfunctioning flight-control sensors of the same type that has been publicly implicated in the crash, according to a summary of Southwest maintenance records reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

 
 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

November 16, 2018 15:00 ET (20:00 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.