Matthew Richardson News
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Sitting onstage in Washington’s Ronald Reagan Building in July, Lloyd C. Blankfein said Goldman Sachs Group Inc. had stopped using its own money to make bets on the bank’s behalf.
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U.S. bank investors may be rewarded with an extra $22 billion annually after government tests showed the industry has regained enough strength to boost dividends and share buybacks.
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Japanese investors may reduce U.K. property holdings, which include stakes in the largest real- estate investment trusts, as they focus on rebuilding in their home country following its strongest earthquake on record.
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“Tell me something cheerful” is how Grover Norquist, the president of Americans for Tax Reform, has started most of the conversations I’ve had with him over the past 20 years. Not last week.
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A number, like a picture, can be worth 1,000 words. In England, 1066 means the Norman Conquest. The world over, 3.14159 screams pi.
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American International Group Inc. commits “corporate suicide” and Fannie Mae becomes a Pied Piper in two of our favorite business books so far this year. Here’s a list of recommended titles.
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William D. Cohan parses the history of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. while Niall Ferguson explains the rise of the West in two of our favorite business books so far this year. Here’s a list of recommended titles.
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Paul Allen recalls the energy and backstabbing that accompanied the founding of Microsoft Corp., while William D. Cohan parses the history of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in two of our favorite business books so far this year. Here’s a list of recommended titles.
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A trader at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. attempts suicide and Greeks pile up “odious” debts in two of our favorite business books so far this year. Here’s a list of recommended titles.
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Many U.S. states and cities have approved measures to help fix poorly funded public pensions. Now courts will decide if they are legal or not.
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