- Oil Next Week: What Traders Will Be Watching

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- Cities With the Most Home Price Reductions
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- Oil Next Week: What Traders Will Be Watching
- Dollar is Not Plunging—So 'Calm Down': Market Strategist
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- Hirschhorn: Risk-Averse Traders
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- Dollar General Trades Higher After Its IPO
- Fed Reform? Not So Fast.
- Struggling studio MGM says it's looking for buyer
- IRS papers say Zsa Zsa Gabor has $118,321 tax bill
- Hawaii planning to replenish sand at Waikiki Beach
- NY Fed president: Crisis can teach finance system
- Taiwan monitor, flat-panel makers announce merger
- Judge rebuked by panel over Ferdinand Marcos money
- Can baseball bring U.S. and Cuba together?
- Mexican revokes permit for Canadian gold mine
- The Gazette in Colorado Springs lays off 11 more
TOKYO - Microsoft Corp Chief Executive Steve Ballmer said on Thursday the company's search engine partnership with Yahoo would not be limited to the U.S. but would be introduced around the world, once it gets regulatory approval.
Earlier this year Microsoft and Yahoo signed a 10-year global Web search partnership to challenge Google Inc, a pact that U.S. and European antitrust regulators are evaluating.
"It's possible that we will extend that partnership (with Yahoo) outside the U.S.," Ballmer told reporters at a news conference. "We will have to wait and see if we can get approval and consummate that partnership inside the U.S. first."
The deal, struck in July, must be approved by regulators in the United States and Europe in order to go into effect.
As soon as those regulators give approval, the agreement goes into effect worldwide, although implementation in a specific country would be postponed if regulatory approval is required but not yet obtained. That should not postpone implementation in other places, a Microsoft spokesman said.
Microsoft believes the deal will close in early 2010, and that they can make significant progress on integration in one or two major markets next year.
- Warren Buffett and Bill Gates spoke to Columbia students, and Buffett made the students a startling offer.
- For the chief of cable company Comcast, growth has been about making deals – generally very large deals.
- Some companies may start using insurance to shift carbon risk from their balance sheets to maybe... yours?
- The president and founder of Genesis Today wants to improve America’s health, and thinks Wal-Mart can help.
- Switzerland's privacy watchdog is taking legal action to force Google to make changes to its Street View service.
- A wealthy, distracted Texas driver crashed his million-dollar Bugatti Veyron sports car into a salt marsh, say police.









