Donald Trump and Elon Musk loom large over this year's World Economic Forum in Davos.
BILLIONAIRES’ CLUB: With Trump taking office, the Davos set arrives on the Magic Mountain this year with newfound swagger. Even as the rest of the world frets about Trump’s threats of a trade war, Wall Street has never had it so good, as your Global Playbook author reports in this story.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves will travel to the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos this week to court potential investors in UK growth projects, joining hundreds of political and economic leaders gathering in the Swiss Alps in the shadow of Donald Trump's inauguration.
Among the issues likely to be explored at the World Economic Forum this week is the future of Ukraine and its impact on Europe.
Billionaires' wealth soared in 2024, a top anti-poverty group said ahead of an annual gathering in Davos, Switzerland of some of the world's political and financial elite.
Rachel Reeves is expected to meet with Donald Trump’s allies at Davos in a bid to talk up the UK’s growth prospects.
The organisers of the annual snowbound gathering in Davos say this year's event comes at a "highly consequential moment for the world", an understatement if ever there was one, writes Europe Editor Tony Connelly.
In this challenge, Deutz, one of the world’s oldest engine makers, has found an opportunity. Frankfurt-listed, Cologne-based Deutz is positioning itself to offer back-up power and microgrid solutions for data centres and other companies ravenous for energy, with a special focus on the US.
Trump's inauguration coincides with day one of Davos, a yearly meeting of the world's business and politics elite. Which will the powerful opt to skip?
In an exclusive conversation with India Today's News Director Rahul Kanwal, World Economic Forum (WEF) President and CEO Borge Brende shared his thoughts on Trump 2.0, India-US ties and more.
As the World Economic Forum begins in Davos, business leaders are talking about what AI and Donald Trump will mean in 2025.