BBC – Business
Computer firm Hewlett-Packard sees a drop in first-quarter sales, as it attempts to turn itself around under new chief executive Meg Whitman.
The Royal Navy selects South Korean firm Daewoo for a £452m deal to build four new fuel tankers.
US President Barack Obama proposes a cut in corporate tax and an end to tax loopholes, as part of his election-year strategy on the economy.
Minutes show two of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee wanted more money pumped into the economy, sending sterling down on the currency markets.
Protests take place outside parliament in Greece, as MPs consider emergency laws after a 130bn-euro bailout deal.
Fashion retailer Peacocks is sold out of administration to Edinburgh Woollen Mill, saving 6,000 jobs, but 3,100 staff will be made redundant.
Peugeot shares jump 12% after the carmaker confirms it is in talks about possible "co-operations and alliances".
As Budget day looms Steph McGovern asks Peter Taylor the Managing Director of Hotter Shoes, what he would like to see the Chancellor do to help UK PLC.
A gas-fuelled fire, with flames as high as 5m, may burn for months in waters off the Niger Delta in south-east Nigeria, a Chevron spokesperson tells the BBC.
Estelle Cooch from the Right To Work protest group says the government's work experience scheme is 'slave labour'.





