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Malaysia's embattled flagship carrier may soon face layoffs and changes in the boardroom as part of a restructuring that Prime Minister Najib Razak said would involve 'painful steps and sacrifices from all parties.'
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Deutsche Telekom Chief Executive Timotheus Höttges said he hasn't received an offer for U.S. subsidiary T-Mobile US that meets his requirements for a deal, as the company reported a rise in second-quarter profit.
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Scripps and AMC, two smaller cable programmers, showed the impact of rising programming costs in lower second-quarter results, highlighting challenges each face in surviving in a competitive television market.
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Sprint's new boss is a 6-foot-6-inch Bolivian billionaire whose efforts could determine whether the wireless firm's decision to end a $32 billion plan to buy T-Mobile was a savvy, pragmatic move or a disaster.
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Chrysler said income rose 22% to $619 million in its second quarter, bolstered by demand for its pickup trucks and sport-utility vehicles and underscoring the company's importance to its Italian parent, Fiat SpA.
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Walgreen faced investor backlash after deciding against relocating its corporate headquarters overseas as part of its acquisition of the rest of European drugstore chain Alliance Boots.
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For starters, don't link pay packages just to stock. Tie them to the company's debt as well. That will help ensure that CEOs reap big rewards for long-term success, not just a short-lived bump in the stock price.
Teaching employees new skills is one thing. Getting them to apply what they have learned is quite another.
All that productivity is stressing out the euro-zone's powerhouse economy.
Jay Stein left his post as CEO only to come back years later. He offers advice to wannabe boomerangs.
Wal-Mart's international chief, David Cheesewright, sees two big challenges for the retail giant: customers are moving online and growth rates around the globe are slowing.
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U.S. and international accounting rule makers are getting closer to a final version of their long-awaited lease accounting overhaul by next year, but the two boards are unlikely to use the same lease expensing model in their final rules.
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The question of who counts as a foreign official under U.S. foreign bribery law may reach the Supreme Court.




Hundreds of teens are working on Southwire Co.'s factory line four hours a day, earning $9-an-hour and spending eight hours a day in the company's classrooms -- part of a program to build a skilled workforce.
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Some private college loans now carry lower rates than federal Plus loans, a reversal from as recently as a year ago.
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Financial pressures and fierce competition in more established markets are pushing business schools to view Africa as something more than a destination for student volunteer trips.
Economic downturns offer unique opportunities to launch innovative new products and services. Here's how entrepreneurs - both inside and outside of corporations - can make smart decisions about innovating in a slump.
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