General Motors ignored a request from Ford Motor Co. and ran a humorous Chevrolet truck ad during the Super Bowl that takes a slap at Ford.
Once again, Chrysler's Super Bowl ad won the hearts and minds of football fans, this time with a little help from Clint Eastwood and, of course, Detroit.
Stocks surged last week to their highest levels in years, but there are few key economic reports slated for the week ahead to sustain the rally.
The Great Recession has dealt Nevada a losing hand.
Mickey Mouse can finally grow that goatee he's always wanted. Until now, Disney parks and resort employees had been prohibited from growing beards and goatees. Starting Friday they may do so, so long as they're a quarter-inch or shorter.
Shares of General Motors and Ford surged on Friday following strong data on the U.S. job market.
U.S. stocks rallied Friday, as investors cheered a much stronger-than-expected jobs report.
Micron CEO and chairman Steve Appleton died Friday morning in a small-plane crash in Boise.
The unemployment rate for blacks fell more than 2 percentage points last month to its lowest level since March 2009.
Facebook has played a big role in the private trading markets that allow eligible investors the chance to snap up shares of hot Internet companies years before they go public.
Companies are saying the job market is getting better. Workers are saying it's already kicked into high gear.
Facebook has finally filed for an IPO, but it likely won't start trading for months. For those who can't wait to gamble on the stock market, bookies are accepting bets.
The strong January jobs report may finally put a nail in the QE3 coffin.
The January jobs report contains a slew of numbers that are likely to put a twinkle in the eye of Obama campaign staffers.
A growing number of states are seeking shiny new currencies made of silver and gold.
American employers substantially stepped up their hiring in January, bringing the unemployment rate down for the fifth month in a row.
A new Obama administration push to strengthen U.S. manufacturing has the support of smaller firms, but it might not be enough to stir many into action.
Lean times call for budgetary triage. But while you should clearly opt for orthodontics before Disneyland, the choice is tougher when it comes to home maintenance.
States have until late Monday to agree to the latest draft deal aimed at relieving homeowners struggling with mortgages bigger than their home's value.
I hope to have $4 million saved by the time I retire in 30 years. That sounds like a lot of money, but how much would that be in today's dollars? -- Brian
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