|              |   | LATEST NEWS |   | Egypt unrest knocks Wall Street lower |   | NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks suffered their biggest one-day  loss in more than five months on Friday as anti-government rioting  in Egypt prompted investors to flee to less risky assets to  ride out the turmoil. | Full Article |   |  |    | Consumer spending, trade buoy U.S. economy in Q4 |   | January 28, 2011 04:19 PM ET |   | WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. economy gathered speed in the  fourth quarter to regain its pre-recession peak with a big gain  in consumer spending and strong exports, removing doubts about  the recovery's sustainability. | Full Article |    | Higher costs sink Ford profit, shares slide |   | January 28, 2011 01:23 PM ET |   | DETROIT (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co's earnings fell far short of  expectations as costs for raw materials and new vehicle launches  surged and its business in Europe suffered an unexpected loss,  driving its shares down 12 percent. | Full Article |    | BofA banker bonuses likely down, cash portion up |   | January 28, 2011 12:09 PM ET |   | CHARLOTTE, North Carolina (Reuters) - Senior investment banking  executives at Bank of America Corp will likely see as much as  80 percent of their 2010 bonuses in stock, but the cash portion  will be higher than what was paid out last year, said a source  familiar with the company's pay plans. | Full Article |  |    |   |  |   | US TOP NEWS |    | China rating agency blames U.S. for "credit war" |   | January 28, 2011 03:09 PM ET |   | BEIJING/NEW YORK (Reuters) - The ultra-loose monetary policy  of the United States is setting the stage for "a world credit  war," a Chinese rating agency said on Friday, in the latest  warning against soaring debt burdens in developed economies. | Full Article |    | U.S., Japan told time running out to deal with debt |   | January 28, 2011 09:59 AM ET |   | TOKYO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Japan and the United States faced  new pressure to confront their swollen budget deficits as the  IMF and rating agencies demanded more evidence they can bring  their public debts under control. | Full Article |    | Companies pull hard in pricing tug-of-war |   | January 28, 2011 04:25 PM ET |   | LONDON (Reuters) - Fretful central bankers and hard-pressed consumers  hoping companies will swallow rising input costs look set to  be disappointed as evidence grows that prices will increase  in coming months. | Full Article |  |    |   |  |   | HEALTH NEWS |  |  |   |   |  |   | RELATED VIDEO |   |  |  |    |  |   |   |  |   | A daily digest of breaking business news, coverage of the US economy, major corporate news and the financial markets. Register Today. |    |  |   | Your daily briefing on the latest tech developments from around the world from Reuters expert tech correspondents. Register Today. |    |  |   | The  latest Reuters articles on M&A, IPOs, private equity, hedge funds  and regulatory updates delivered to your inbox each day.. Register Today. |  |   | » MORE NEWSLETTERS |    |    |  |   | ODDLY ENOUGH |   |  |  |  | 
 
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