Before being forced out, Bed Bath & Beyond’s co-founders turned thrift, savvy merchandising & good timing into a co… https://t.co/qaPP1eJhQa— 16 hours 25 min ago via@theofrancis
@footnoted Oh wow. So glad you're all OK. What a nightmare.— 4 days 16 hours ago via@theofrancis
Striking story on due-diligence gone wrong, from Ron Liber of the New York Times: How Charlie Javice Got JPMorgan t… https://t.co/j2ivsbjpPI— 4 days 16 hours ago via@theofrancis
Unemployed Americans are spending more time out of work as employers slow hiring from a red-hot pace earlier in the… https://t.co/Iju8YFFNhn— 6 days 18 hours ago via@theofrancis
Crypto is back — in Davos, at least, along with Anthony Scaramucci — as redemption tour rolls on. Fun piece from Wa… https://t.co/l97mx4NtWd— 1 week 2 days ago via@theofrancis
President Barack Obama's plan to overhaul financial regulation covers everything from mortgages to hedge funds. But reform efforts in Europe may prove more significant for U.S. companies. European regulators are hashing out new rules for banks, insurers, and money managers that could put U.S. firms at a disadvantage.
World leaders are talking bravely about fixing the global financial system. As the Group of Twenty heads toward an important summit in Pittsburgh on Sept. 24-25, they are vowing to bang out a regulatory structure that will keep rich, careless bankers from once again driving their firms to ruin and then getting bailed out by taxpayers.