International stocks trading in New York were mixed on Wednesday.

The BNY Mellon index of American depositary receipts edged up 0.01% to 145.41. The European index eased 0.01% to 143.46, the Asian index edged down 0.03% to 153.31, the Latin American index rose 0.22% to 218.15 and the emerging markets index increased 0.58% to 262.92. Qihoo 360 Technology Co. (QIHU) was among the companies with ADRs that traded actively.

ADRs of Qihoo rose 6.2% to $70.15 after the Chinese Internet firm reported that it received a management-buyout offer valuing the company at about $10 billion, marking potentially the largest deal yet in a wave of going-private offers for U.S.-traded Chinese firms. Qihoo said Wednesday that it received an offer from a group that included Chairman and Chief Executive Zhou Hongyi to take the company private at $77 per ADS.

The total amount paid by banks to settle a civil lawsuit tied to allegations traders manipulated the currency market has now reached almost $2 billion following a recent round of settlement agreements. HSBC Holdings PLC (HSBC, HSBA.LN, 0005.HK), Barclays PLC (BCS, BARC.LN), BNP Paribas SA and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. recently have signed agreements to settle the case, The Wall Street Journal reported. HSBC agreed to pay $285 million and Barclays $375 million, the Journal said. Barclays ADRs rose two cents to $16.56 and HSBC rose six cents to $46.71.

BT Group PLC (BT, BT.A.LN) said its proposed acquisition of mobile operator EE will create a "true digital champion," as the U.K. fixed-line telecommunications company fights back against claims the deal could erode competition and lead to higher prices. ADRs rose 2.2% to $71.25.

The U.S. Justice Department granted an antitrust clearance for Finnish telecom network equipment supplier Nokia Corp. (NOK, NOK1V.HE) to proceed with its 15.6 billion euros ($17.6 billion) deal for French rival Alcatel-Lucent (ALU, ALU.FR). The companies also are making progress with the regulatory approval processes in the remaining relevant jurisdictions, Nokia said in a statement. The deal is expected to close in the first half of next year. Nokia ADRs fell two cents to $7.12 and Alcatel-Lucent fell 1.1% to $3.73.

Pearson PLC (PSO, PSON.LN) agreed to sell its PowerSchool business to Vista Equity Partners for a gross consideration of $350 million in cash. Pearson's chief executive said the sale of PowerSchool--an administrative system rather than a teaching and assessment tool--will help further simplify the U.K.-based publishing and education company as it aims to make its products more global and digital. ADRs rose 16 cents to $19.93.

Barclays thinks Statoil ASA (STO, STL.OS) is taking the right steps to weather the oil price downturn by controlling its cost base, driving efficiency improvements and also being prepared to use significant flexibility in capital spending beyond 2016. The bank also sees these actions as appropriate for the current environment and said that in some cases the Norwegian oil major is doing better than its peers. However, Barclays expects Statoil's earnings to lag behind the rest of the sector this year given limited downstream protection. Statoil ADRs rose 2% to $18.53.

WPP PLC (WPPGY, WPP.LN) more than doubled its stake in Denmark-based TechEdge to 49% from 20%. The U.K.-based advertising giant said the increased stake in the television-audience measurement software supplier is part of the WPP's broader effort to develop services in fast-growing and important markets and to strengthen its capabilities in digital media. ADRs of WPP rose seven cents to $114.85.

Write to Tess Stynes at tess.stynes@wsj.com

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