Tennessee News
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Updated 2 hours, 32 minutes ago
Hail, flooding rain and tornadoes may crash through the Ohio Valley into the South today, while a threat of severe storms extends from Louisiana to upstate New York, according to the National Weather Service.
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Updated 56 minutes ago
Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd., with seven of eight hedge funds it accused of spreading false rumors out of a lawsuit, may see the $24 billion case shrink again. A judge is poised to rule whether racketeering counts allowing triple damages should be tossed, Bloomberg News’s Thom Weidlich reports.
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A commission appointed by the Group of 20 nations called for stricter regulation of price-reporting agencies to prevent the manipulation of oil markets.
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Express Scripts Inc.’s takeover of Medco Health Solutions Inc. is offering the biggest potential windfall in North America even as traders are more confident than ever the acquisition will clear U.S. regulatory hurdles.
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FedEx Corp. and United Parcel Service Inc. said U.S. regulators failed to persuade the two cargo airlines to adopt pilot-fatigue rules imposed on passenger carriers.
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Monster Worldwide Inc., the online recruiting service, gained the most in six months after Chief Executive Officer Salvatore Iannuzzi said he’s considering “strategic alternatives” to boost investor value.
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Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Dennis Lockhart said he is concerned that a new round of asset purchases by the Fed would fuel inflation while failing to spur lending.
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The east London borough hosting the 2012 Olympic Games had the city’s biggest decline in home prices even after the government spent billions of pounds on projects aimed at revitalizing the capital’s poorest area.
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Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd., with seven of eight hedge funds it accused of spreading false rumors out of a lawsuit, may see the $24 billion case shrink again with a judge poised to rule whether racketeering counts allowing triple damages should be tossed.
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A majority of banks in the Southeast U.S. supervised by the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta remain troubled more than two and a half years after the recession ended, said Michael Johnson, senior vice president for supervision and regulation.
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