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.
Vasu Menon, Vice President of Wealth Management Singapore at OCBC Bank, warns that volatility should be expected going forward and a correction of 5% would be ideal entry point into the markets.
Jonathan Pain, Author, 'The Pain Report' believes Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's determination to end deflation will send dollar-yen to 100 by 2013 and see an economic pick-up in the next 6 months.
Do you know what the "Squawk Box" team is talking about when they refer to "fair value" ahead of the market's open? Salman Khan of the Khan Academy has a detailed explanation. (3:16)
J.P. Morgan strategist Thomas Lee is optimistic about stocks going into next year, but does think there could be a consolidation in the next few months. (1:08)
A vacant house in Japan collapses under the weight of a heavy snow, and an oceanfront home in Massachusetts is pushed off its foundation by a storm. (1:17)
Nouriel Roubini, co-founder and chairman of Roubini Global Economics, tells CNBC Europe that the stock market could be surprised by how much the U.S. economy slows down in the second half of the year, causing it to "correct somehow." (1:00)
Hong Kong's IPO market has been tame in comparison to past years, but next week brings a new entrant as the first pawn shop operator lands on the exchange. CNBC's Bernie Lo has more.
After a strong 236,000 increase in non-farm payrolls for February, Rick Santelli and Steve Liesman clash on whether the strength should prompt the Federal Reserve to start raising interest rates. (1:55)
Ravi Krishnaswamy, VP for Asia Pacific Energy & Power Systems at Frost & Sullivan, explains why nuclear is back on the energy agenda of many Asian countries, just two years after the Fukushima disaster in Japan.
In China, with wages rising rapidly and shifts towards moving up the factory food chain, CNBC's Eunice Yoon takes a look at one garment factory's efforts to stay competitive.
CNBC's Adam Bakhtiar looks at Midas in the daily 'Stock in 60' segment after shares rose over 4% on announcements of government restructuring and urbanization in China.
Kevin Snowball, CEO at PXP Vietnam Asset Management, explains how Vietnam is on the same path as China was 25 years ago, but he thinks Vietnam's economy will be more stable.
Dan Yergin, Vice Chairman at IHS, discusses the US's growing attraction to shale gas as China plans to unlock what could be among the world's biggest shale gas reserves.
Evan Feigenbaum, Former U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State says that proliferation threats from North Korea remain acute given Pyongyang's alliance with rogue states.
Quinten Schmit from Lake Stevens, Washington, came closest to February's non-farm payroll number with a winning guess of 241,000 in "Squawk on the Street'" monthly contest. He talks with Carl Quintanilla about his views on the economy and stocks. (2:20)
James Chanos, Kynikos Associates, shares his views on the outlook on China, and why investors should avoid anything having to do with the Chinese property markets. (0:57)
Cyclists are beginning to mount cameras on helmets and handlebars to document motor vehicles who hit them or run them off the road. NBC's Tom Costello reports. (2:13)
“Doom, Boom and Gloom Report” editor Marc Faber tells “Closing Bell” that “people become rich through work” and he doesn’t “deserve” to be wealthy through capital gains. (1:28)
Amit Midha, President of Commercial Business in the Asia Pacific Japan Region for Dell talks to CNBC about what the buyout drama means for corporate strategy.