John Collins News
-
A Ferrari that competed in the 1953 Le Mans 24-hour race and another that John Lennon bought just after passing his driving test are coming up for auction as prices rise for classic models by the Italian maker.
-
Morgan Stanley re-hired John Collins, a mergers-and-acquisitions banker who left the firm three years ago to join Moelis & Co., for a newly created role as global operations officer for the investment-banking division.
-
A 1930s Bugatti has sold for about $30 million to become the world’s most expensive car -- with dealers predicting more records as billionaires look for alternatives to risky financial investments.
-
The top lawyer for the body that oversees soccer in North and Central America and the Caribbean said auditors found discrepancies in the group’s finances.
-
Chicago teachers ended the city’s first school strike in 25 years, after union delegates quelled an outbreak of labor unrest in President Barack Obama’s hometown with seven weeks to go before the presidential election.
-
Jack Warner, the former FIFA vice president who quit yesterday, said he’d “die first” rather than meet with former FBI Director Louis Freeh, who’s investigating allegations of bribery within the soccer body.
-
In “Ganesh Versus the Third Reich,” the elephant-headed Hindu god goes to Germany to reclaim the swastika design that the Fuhrer has turned into an icon of slaughter.
-
The only Aston Martin to have won the Le Mans 24-Hour race is up for sale, priced at a record $32 million.
-
A 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO made for race driver Stirling Moss has become the world’s most expensive car, selling in a private transaction last month for $35 million.
-
A Ferrari belonging to the former world champion driver Jenson Button is estimated to sell for as much as 110,000 pounds ($180,000) at an auction next month.
|
|
Most Popular on Bloomberg
|
| |