Shares in crisis-hit autoparts maker Takata plunged again Thursday, losing a quarter of their value and deepening the loss caused by fatal faults in their airbags.
The Tokyo-listed stock plummeted 25 percent to 889 yen ($7.32) to its lowest close this year after tumbling more than 13 percent Wednesday.

Deutsche Telekom on Thursday confirmed its full-year profit targets after rising mobile subscriber numbers in the United States and the expansion of its fibre-optic network in Germany buoyed business in the third quarter.
"Deutsche Telekom's performance in the third quarter of 2015 was dominated by double-digit growth rates in the most important financial indicators," the company said in a statement.

Oil prices rebounded in Asia Thursday after tanking in the previous session but the market remains under pressure by a global crude oversupply.
Prices were hammered Wednesday after data showed that commercial crude inventories in the United States, the world's top oil consumer, rose in the week to October 30.

Iran's ambition to regain its full oil export capacity after the lifting of international sanctions is likely to take several years rather than months, a report said on Wednesday.
The Arab Petroleum Investment Corp (APICORP) said the Islamic republic is expected to add just 400,000 barrels per day by the end of next year and another 300,000 bpd by the end of 2017.

Maersk Line, the world's number one container shipping firm, said Wednesday it would cut 4,000 jobs by the end of 2017 and defer vessel investments to buoy up its dominant position in a falling market.
The maritime division of Danish conglomerate A.P. Moeller-Maersk has been battling price and demand falls and is cutting capacity and has warned that a fall in activity will hit annual results due for publication Friday.

Oil prices were down in Asia Wednesday as investors weighed U.S. petroleum industry data showing a build-up in crude stockpiles and news that shipments from a Libyan port were halted due to tensions.
U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in December was down 15 cents at $47.75 and Brent crude for December was trading 14 cents lower at $50.40 at 0600 GMT.

The U.S. dollar fell against emerging market currencies in Asia on Wednesday as worries over China's economy faded and investors awaited fresh input from the Federal Reserve on its timeline for an interest rate hike.
The Malaysian ringgit and the Indonesian rupiah booked solid gains against the greenback as a commodity price recovery pushed equity markets into positive territory.

German top-of-the-range carmaker BMW said Tuesday it was on track to meet its full-year sales and profits targets, but that the slowing Chinese economy and the precarious state of the Russian market posed challenges for the future.
BMW "can look ahead confidently to the remainder of the current financial year and reaffirms its targets for the full year," the company said in a statement.

U.S. video game producer Activision Blizzard announced late Monday that it was buying King Digital Entertainment, best known for its "Candy Crush Saga" mobile game, for $5.9 billion.
Activision Blizzard, which produces such games as "Call of Duty," said in a statement the purchase "will create one of the largest global entertainment networks with over half a billion combined monthly active users in 196 countries."

Asia-focused British bank Standard Chartered said Tuesday it would axe 15,000 jobs and raise $5.1 billion in capital after posting a "disappointing" third-quarter loss as it struggles to return to growth.
The job losses are part of a major restructuring that will cost around $3 billion, the bank said.
