Airline Security Checkpoints for "Trusted Travelers" Urged

In light of airline security hassles, a travel group is calling for creation of a voluntary "trusted traveler" program. The program would be seen as one step toward easing bottlenecks at U.S. airport security checkpoints which impact many business travelers every day in the country. more

Pepsi Bottles Go Green with Plant Based Materials

New Pepsi bottles may be the advantage that the beverage company needs to gain an upper hand on rival Coca-Cola. The new bottles, which were discussed by the media on Tuesady, feature 100% non-plastic, plant-based materials. Key ingredients in the new compound are switch grass, pine bark, corn husks, and other materials. more

Bank of Japan Increases Economic Funding Offer to $690 Billion

The Bank of Japan, the Japanese central bank, stepped-in again Wednesday with an unprecedented emergency funding effort as the country convulsed in the quake-tsunami aftermath. BOJ offered an additional 13.8 trillion yen (about $170 billion) to short-term money markets, with an immediate injection of 5 trillion yen, Kyodo News reported. more

Emerging Markets Continue to Drop Percentage Points

Emerging markets like the Dow, FTSE and S&P; are all continuing their sharp decline in the wake of the disasters in Japan. Most markets are being hurt by energy sector cautiousness as the nuclear situation on the Eastern shores of Japan continue to unfold. more

Broadband Service Plans in Britain Intend to Help Economic Growth

Broadband Internet services may be available to everyone in Britain should the new government program be a complete success. Last week, we learned that the British government is beginning an ambitious program to wire the country with broadband Internet technology. more

Ben Bernanke Thinks Gas Prices Won't Fuel Inflation

Ben Bernanke says that U.S. gasoline prices, up more than 40 cents in the past month, will probably not drive up underlying inflation. more

Tsunami Damage Estimates Lowered in Hawaii

The tsunami that hit Hawaii Friday caused tens of millions of dollars in damage but less than originally thought, Gov. Neil Abercrombie's office said. more

iPad 2 Debut Irks Some Economic Experts

Last week, the iPad 2 debuted to long lines at retail outlets. Some economists, like the president of the New York Federal Reserve said Friday that the lines were a good example of price inflation on hold. more

Stock Market Crashes in Response to Crisis

Stock markets closed on Monday feeling the pain of the crisis in Japan. The earthquake induced nuclear problems sent stock prices crashing again Tuesday even as its central bank boosted emergency funding to restore confidence. more

Dow Jones Industrial Average Plummets on Tuesday

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped more than 240 points in mid-morning trading as the U.S. markets plunged early Tuesday following a huge sell-off in Tokyo that sent the Nikkei 225 index down 10.55 percent. more

Ides Of March, George Clooney's New Film, Wrapping Up Production

The "Ides of March" is George Clooney's latest film, and we felt it necessary to address the production of the film on date of the namesake. We're not alone in our interest of the "Ides of March", either. More than 23,000 people applied to be extras in actor George Clooney's latest film, which is heading to Michigan to film its final scenes, officials said. more

Oil Prices Yet to React to Libyan Situation at Brega

Oil prices remain settled around $101 per barrel Tuesday morning, despite ongoing strife in Libya's oil town of Brega. Government forces and rebels fought for control of Brega, with each side, at one time or another, claiming the upper hand, witnesses said. more

Interest Rates & Stocks Drive Japanese Markets Down 10% in Single Day

Interest rate concerns prompted the Bank of Japan to ready more than $220 billion, but the markets continued to set the pace in a troubling day of trading in the wake of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami - dropping nearly 10% in one day. more

Mortgage Rates Rise to 4.88% in Last Week

Mortgage rate averages for 30-year and 15-year mortgages rose a tiny amount in the week ending March 10, the U.S. Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation said last Thursday. more

Warren Buffett & Berkshire Hathaway Spend $9.7 Billion in Cash for Lubrizol

Warren Buffet and his investment firm, Berkshire Hathaway, announced on Monday that it agreed to buy Lubrizol Corporation, a U.S. lubricant producer, for $9.7 billion in an all-cash deal. more

Oil Prices Rise Back Above $100 Per Barrel

Crude oil prices rose back above the $100 per barrel mark on Monday while markets adjusted to news of the earthquake-tsunami disaster in Japan. more

Fukushima Nuclear Plant Key to Energy Sector Performance in Markets

Fukushima nuclear plant explosions have many business analysts hesitant to delve into the business of the energy sector this week. When Japanese markets opened on Monday morning, they took large hits - and internationally, similar concerns began to grow. more

Tom Brady a Key Figure in Antitrust Lawsuit Against NFL

Tom Brady joined Drew Brees and Peyton Manning as some of the most notable names to proactively force issues between the NFL Players Union and the league after negotiations broke down on Friday. The players are part of a group who filed an antitrust lawsuit against the league. more

Carmelo Anthony Was a Challenge for Denver Nuggets Business Operations

Carmelo Anthony is settled into his new role with the New York Knicks, but many NBA league analysts continue to debate his impact on business. Before being traded from the Denver Nuggets, business certainly took a hit - both in the form of the bottom line as well as in public perception. more

Stock Market to Experience Aftershocks of Japanese Disaster

Stock market experts are bracing themselves for what the week may bring. The massive earthquake that struck Japan Friday could tip the scales in the country's efforts to reduce its debt and turn its economy around, analysts said. more

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