Thomson Reuters Corp.

  • The PBOC's call on the lenders to give priority to first-time home buyers when allocating credit marks a policy shift for the government.

  • Oil fracking

    U.S. crude rose as expectations of a build in inventories were undermined by record low stocks at the benchmark's Cushing delivery point.

  • With a number of casino expansion projects underway in Macau, investors are questioning whether the world's largest casino market is at risk of saturation.

  • Wall Street has its eye on the Federal Reserve's meeting, but a slew of data is likely to have more influence on stocks Wednesday.

  • Will the bull run continue? The question is whether conditions are ripe for economic growth and corporate earnings to rise.

  • Eighteen brokerages agreed to end participating in analyst surveys as a result of a N.Y. investigation into the early release of analyst sentiment.

  • BlackRock headquarters in New York City.

    BlackRock agreed to end its analyst survey program worldwide, as part of an agreement reached Wednesday with the New York Attorney General's office.

  • JPMorgan & Chase Co. signage outside of the company's headquarters in New York.

    JPMorgan Chase is banning the use of multidealer online chat rooms and the use of such chat rooms among staff for social purposes.

  • Nasdaq

    Nasdaq OMX Group reported a lower second-quarter profit, mainly due to acquisition costs related to the closing of two deals by the transatlantic exchange operator.

  • Early Trader Edge Ending

    Thomson Reuters is suspending its practice of allowing some clients to pay for early access to economic data. CNBC's Eamon Javers has the details.

  • Early Trader Edge Ending

    CNBC's Eamon Javers reports elite traders will no longer gain early access to economic data before public release.

  • Outrage Over Early Access to Data

    Thomson Reuters gives elite traders an early advantage, reports CNBC's Eamon Javers. Harvey Pitt, Former SEC Chairman; Irene Aldridge, Alpha Trading; and CNBC's Steve Liesman, provide perspective.

  • Pay to Play (Before Everyone Else)

    Elite traders can receive early access to consumer confidence data for a fee, reports CNBC's Eamon Javers. CNBC's Rick Santelli and Jim Cramer, and Jared Bernstein, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, discuss.

  • High Speed Traders' Edge

    CNBC has obtained a document showing that, for a fee, an elite group of traders access a closely watched piece of market-moving data before its release. CNBC's Eamon Javers and Steve Liesman discuss.

  • Two Second Delay Gives High Speed Traders Edge

    CNBC's Eamon Javers reports the consumer confidence number is accessed by an elite group of traders, for a fee, a full two seconds before its official release. CNBC's Steve Liesman weighs in.

  • Millions in a Millisecond

    CNBC's Eamon Javers reports a tiny clock synchronization issue gave some traders a high-speed edge. And CNBC's Jim Cramer provides his take onhigh-frequency trades.

  • News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch.

    As News Corp. prepares to separate its publishing business from its entertainment assets, the publishing company's new chief executive said there are "relentless" cost cuts in store.

  • Reusable: oil gas derrick exploration drilling sunset

    European authorities raided the offices of Shell, BP and Statoil in an investigation of suspected manipulation of oil prices.

  • TipRanks

    TipRanks has launched a free tool aimed at retail investors that rates more than 5,000 sell-side analysts.

  • It's time for the Lightning Round. Cramer makes the call on viewer favorites.