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Manage Email SubscriptionsSaudi Prince al-Waleed bin Talal’s investment company, Kingdom Holding, has sold the Four Seasons Hotel in Toronto for $171.3 million to a family-owned business tied to Pakistani-American businessman Shahid Khan.
Investors shifted toward riskier stocks in the third quarter, helping push major U.S. indexes to record highs and lifting optimism that stocks’ seven-year bull run will continue despite sputtering corporate earnings.
Salesforce.com Inc.’s annual Dreamforce customer conference, set to blanket downtown San Francisco next week, will be a blend of business, technology, entertainment, philanthropy and personal empowerment.
Qualcomm is best known for designing smartphone chips—and leaving the production to others. Now, the San Diego-based company is in talks to acquire chip manufacturer NXP Semiconductors in a shift that adds substantial risks.
The Supreme Court is steering clear of polarizing ideological disputes in the new session that opens Monday—and instead will focus on nuts-and-bolts cases such as criminal prosecution and intellectual property while it remains short one justice.
Google, long focused on individual users, is looking to deepen its influence in the world of businesses customers, which today are driven by teams. Its new offering, called Team Drives, focuses on managing content and sharing at a team level.
Federal regulators Thursday delayed a vote on a proposal to overhaul the market for TV set-top boxes, dealing a setback to Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler on one of his top priorities for the year.
Microsoft is concentrating its artificial-intelligence efforts under one roof as veteran executive Qi Lu stepped down to focus on recovering from a bicycle accident.
The three year effort to integrate the IT systems of American Airlines and the former US Airways reaches another milestone this weekend as American shifts the planes and pilots to a single operating system. They will use American's massive flight operating system, which runs 500 applications.
The surge in technology stocks this quarter has the S&P 500 tech sector hitting a milestone last seen at the tail end of the dot-com era.
Apple’s first research center in China will be a $45 million facility located in the capital to develop hardware, the site’s landlord said, announcing some of the first details of the project.
Sweden’s Spotify has joined other online music providers trying to crack the Japanese market, where compact discs still dominate.
After 15 years, music-discovery company Shazam Entertainment is turning an operating profit. The app maker earns most of its revenue from advertisers, who pay to use its image-recognition and sound-recognition technology in their marketing campaigns.
Federal regulators’ proposal to overhaul the market for TV set-top boxes remained on a knife’s edge a day ahead of a scheduled vote by the Federal Communications Commission.
BlackBerry has given up on designing and producing its smartphones, outsourcing that work instead. The device’s woes were in many ways a product of its rapid and improbable success.
BlackBerry Ltd. said it would outsource the making of handsets and instead focus on developing secure software and services.
Apple and Deloitte & Touche have formed a service called Enterprise Next, through which 5,000 Deloitte consultants will advise clients in a range of industries on using Apple mobile devices.
Silicon Valley giant Apple said that it planned to relocate 1,400 employees to a new London campus in 2021, in a sign that international corporations remain committed to the U.K. after June’s Brexit vote.
The Bank of England made its first foray into the corporate bond market in three years, with an offer to buy the debt of companies in sectors including energy, transport and finance.