
Brexit and Boris Johnson Send the British Pound on a Slide
As investors take stock of the new prime minister and gauge whether Britain will crash out of the European Union, they are selling the currency.
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As investors take stock of the new prime minister and gauge whether Britain will crash out of the European Union, they are selling the currency.
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Mr. Stadler, who led Volkswagen’s Audi luxury car division, was charged in Munich with fraud and illegal advertising tied to the emissions scandal.
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The central bank appears poised to cut interest rates for the first time since the financial crisis. Here’s what to keep an eye on.
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Though presidential candidates appearing at a debate on Tuesday generally favored a strong approach to China, they differed over whether protectionism was the way forward.
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V.G. Siddhartha beat Starbucks to dominate India’s retail coffee industry, but he also faced growing debt and pressure from the tax authorities.
By Kai Schultz, Raymond Zhong and

The influential website continues to resist the efforts of its new owner, Bryan Goldberg, to bring it back to life.
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An engineer in Seattle was charged with stealing the information of millions of customers from Capital One. The incident was surprisingly common.
By Stacy Cowley and

Revenue rose slightly in the most recent quarter, the company said, but profits still fell as iPhone sales continued to drop.
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Floodwaters swamped more than half a million acres of forest and farmland in the lower Mississippi Delta more than six months ago, gulping up highways and homes, livestock and tractors.
By Rory Doyle and
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Renee Holland sent her Facebook friend thousands of dollars. She became entwined in a global fraud that the social network and the United States military appear helpless to stop.
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A Times investigation found that the F.A.A. regulatory process, which gave Boeing significant oversight authority, compromised the safety of the plane.
By Natalie Kitroeff, David Gelles and

Mr. Epstein, charged with sex trafficking, cultivated an intimate, yearslong relationship with Leslie Wexner — and proceeded to get extraordinarily rich.
By Emily Steel, Steve Eder, Sapna Maheshwari and

The widening wealth gap is being felt in the most fundamental way: where people live. The apartments in which many residents now live are so small they are called cages and coffins.
By Alexandra Stevenson and

When Philip Poniz opened Box 105 at his local Wells Fargo, he discovered it was empty — and that he was totally unprotected by federal law.
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