United Airlines to Review 'Worst Travel Nightmare' 
 

United Continental Holdings Inc. is reviewing an incident that left 250 passengers stuck on an airplane on a small Canadian airfield for about 12 hours last weekend.

 
Carlos Ghosn Offers to Pay for Ankle Monitor, Security to Get Bail in Japan 
 

The former Nissan Motor chairman scaled back his request for bail as his detention stretches into its ninth week.

 
Facebook, Germany to Collaborate Against Election Interference 
 

Facebook operating chief Sheryl Sandberg said the company will work with the German ministry for information security to guide policy throughout Europe on election interference.

 
DSV's Big Takeover Bid May Revive Logistics Consolidation 
 

DSV's $4 billion bid for rival freight forwarder Panalpina suggests stockpiles of cash and pent-up demand from operators and private equity could come into the market and trigger a new wave of consolidation among large logistics companies.

 
Two Snap Executives Pushed Out After Probe Into Inappropriate Relationship 
 

Snap in recent weeks pushed out two senior executives after an investigation found that one of them had allegedly engaged in an inappropriate relationship with an outside contractor.

 
Morgan Stanley CEO Earned $29 Million in 2018 
 

Chief Executive James Gorman received a compensation package valued at about $29 million in 2018, a 7% raise from the $27 million he earned a year ago.

 
Airbnb Has Held Talks to Buy Hotel Tonight 
 

Airbnb has held talks to acquire hotel-booking site Hotel Tonight, as the home-sharing company seeks to bolster its offerings and make itself more attractive to investors ahead of an eventual IPO.

 
German Forklift Maker Kion Plans U.S. Expansion to Avoid China Tariffs 
 

Germany's Kion Group plans to expand its factory in Summerville, S.C., in a move to escape a 25% tariff the U.S. levied on forklifts imported from China.

 
Schlumberger Says Shale Boom is Slowing 
 

U.S. shale production is poised to slow this year as drillers reduce their budgets in response to lower oil prices, the head of the oil-field services company said.

 
State Street Is Cutting 1,500 Jobs 
 

Aiming to trim some $350 million in expenses this year, State Street said it would shed about 1,500 employees in a plan designed to help weather tough market conditions.

 
 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

January 21, 2019 19:00 ET (00:00 GMT)

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