Steven Schiller, Senior VP, Global Sweets & Refreshment introduces Hershey's new brand of milk candy in the mainland, called the Lancester in English, or Yo-Man in Mandarin.
Steven Schiller, Senior VP, Global Sweets & Refreshment introduces Hershey's new brand of milk candy in the mainland, called the Lancester in English, or Yo-Man in Mandarin.
Technical analyst Richard Ross explains why his charts indicate JPMorgan shares are going up.Fundamental analyst Enis Taner doesn't like the company, but also thinks the stock will rise. (2:32)
Jim Cramer says it's a "crowd pleaser" when Congress goes after Apple for avoiding taxes, because the stock is down so far from its highs. He thinks, however, that the corporate tax code shares a lot of the blame.
In his daily CNBC.com-only video clip, Art Cashin of UBS talks with Bob Pisani about stocks going for a 19th straight Tuesday advance and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's upcoming testimony to Congress.
Jim Cramer identifies one of the 30 stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average that has lagged the market's gains but is now poised to move significantly higher.
In testimony to a Congressional panel, Apple CEO Tim Cook rejects accusations that Apple uses overseas entities to avoid billions in U.S. taxes and calls for a drastic simplification of the country's tax code.
Our focus is on the urgent work of rescue, said President Obama commenting on efforts to provide relief for Oklahoma after a devastating Tornado destroyed neighborhoods, and left at least 51 people dead, 20 of them children. And, CNBC's John Harwood, reports on the clean-up efforts.
The space business in the United Kingdom is growing fast - The country's first official astronaut has been picked for a stint on the International Space Station. Tom Mackenzie reports.
Donald Yacktman, President & Co-CIO of Yacktman Asset Management, says recent M&A activity is a sign of the Fed's easy money burning holes in companies' pockets.
Richard Vuylsteke, President of the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong, discusses the challenges still facing Myanmar and U.S. engagement in the country.
In his daily CNBC.com-only video clip, Art Cashin of UBS talks with Bob Pisani about the stock market's continued rally and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's upcoming testimony to Congress. (2:11)
The burning question for SAC investors who are considering pulling their capital from the hedge fund is whether Steve Cohen will be indicted, reports CNBC's Kate Kelly. (1:41)
Ewald Nowotny, member of the Governing Council of the European Central Bank (ECB), tells CNBC that markets over interpreted the possibility of negative deposit rates and there is no specific plan in that direction.
Kelvin Tay, Regional CIO, Southern APAC at UBS Wealth Management describes current market performance as a rubber duck awash in a flood of central bank liquidity.
CNBC's Josh Lipton looks at three stocks to watch tomorrow, including Priceline, which delivered a solid first quarter. Also, Gap announces strong sales, and True Religion reports before tomorrow's opening bell.
Bill English, Finance Minister of New Zealand, talks about Wellington's plans to raise cash to bring its economy back into surplus. He also discusses why he is unconvinced on Abenomics and denies recent claims that New Zealand is getting involved in global currency wars.
CNBC's Jim Cramer explains why he believes Wall Street firms will continue to use Bloomberg terminals, despite the alleged privacy breach.
(Disclosure: Bloomberg is a competitor of CNBC in reporting and distributing business news on the Web and on television.)