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Hong Kong CNN —With Hong Kong’s sky-high cost of living, residents like Andy Tsui have been looking for alternative ways to have more fun and spend less. Rather than spending his cash in his hometown of Hong Kong, he’s been crossing the border into mainland China to splurge instead. Such trips are noteworthy because, for much of Hong Kong’s modern history, the traffic has been largely — conspicuously, even — in the other direction. Hong Kong used to be the place where Chinese would escape to, not from. In 2023, just 26 million mainlanders — about half of the 2018 crowd — visited Hong Kong.
Persons: Andy Tsui, he’s, boba, ” Tsui, Justin Robertson, Noemi Cassanelli, CNN Hong Kong’s, Hong Kong —, misbehaving, , , Steve Tsang, Hong, Shenzhen’s, Hongkongers, Gilles Sabrie, Hongkonger Eddy Lam, Lam, Cherrie Leung, Qilai Shen, Hugo Sin, , Gary Ng, John Lee, Tsang Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, CNN, Shoppers, Yuen, Britain, Newspapers, Hong, Hong Kong Immigration Department, China Institute, SOAS University, Huawei, Tencent, Bloomberg, Getty, Sam’s Club, Costco, Sam’s, Walmart, Hong Kong, Shenzhen hasn’t, Xinhua, RTHK, SOAS University of London Locations: Hong Kong, China, splurge, Peking, Shenzhen, East, Hong, People’s Republic of China, British, Beijing, London, Bay Area, San Francisco , New York, Tokyo, Kowloon, Coco, Shanghai, , Inner Mongolia, Taiwan, Japan, Mainland China, Hong Kong’s, Britain, Canada, Australia, Bay,
The IRS, with billion of dollars in new funding from Congress, has launched a sweeping crackdown on wealthy taxpayers, partnerships and large companies. The Inflation Reduction Act gave the IRS an $80 billion infusion, yet congressional Republicans won a deal last year to take $20 billion of the funding back. The Treasury Department said last week it estimates greater IRS enforcement to result in an additional $561 billion in tax revenue between 2024 and 2034 — a higher projection than it had initially stated. The IRS is touting its early success with a program to collect unpaid taxes from millionaires. So far, the IRS has collected more than $480 billion from the group, "and we are still going," Werfel said.
Persons: Danny Werfel, Werfel, Ting Shen Organizations: Internal Revenue Service, IRS, CNBC, Congress, Republicans, Treasury Department, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Washington , DC
Why do people keep uninsured money in banks?
  + stars: | 2024-02-12 | by ( Nicole Goodkind | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +10 min
Somehow, the same issue plaguing last year’s failed banks is back in focus at the latest bank in crisis: massive loads of uninsured deposits. To be sure, the risk isn’t anywhere close to that of the banks that failed last year: About 94% of domestic deposits at Silicon Valley Bank were uninsured and 90% of Signature Bank’s deposits were uninsured, according to the Federal Reserve. The money is guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which is funded by fees paid by major US banks. About 40% of all money in the US, or $8 trillion, sitting in banks is uninsured, said Lawrence White, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. “It also risks violating the FDIC’s statutory requirement to resolve failed banks and protect insured depositors in the least expensive way possible.”Sometimes, he said, rescuing those uninsured depositors may be the cheapest way to protect insured depositors at banks.
Persons: NYCB, Brian Snyder, James Lee, David Wessel, Lawrence White, University’s, Banks, Ting Shen, , Kori Suzuki, JPMorgan Chase, Michael Ohlrogge, Maxine Waters, Elizabeth Warren, Organizations: New, New York CNN, New York Community Bancorp, Investors, Silicon Valley Bank, Federal Reserve, Bank, Xinhua, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, FDIC, Reuters, Brookings Institution, International Monetary Fund, University’s Stern School of Business, US Treasury, Bloomberg, Getty, Securities and Exchange Commission, Valley Bank, Signature Bank, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, First Republic Bank, New York University’s School of Law, Financial Services, Banking Committee, CBS, Bank Coalition of America Locations: New York, Silicon, United States, New, , Washington , DC, San Francisco , California, Sen
Washington CNN —The United Auto Workers union on Wednesday endorsed President Joe Biden, a long-awaited announcement that is an important pickup for the president. Biden won the endorsement of the UAW in the 2020 campaign, even though many rank-and-file members supported Trump. Ahead of endorsing Biden, UAW President Shawn Fain said the choice union workers face in 2024 “isn’t about who you like. … Donald Trump stands against everything we stand for as a union – as a society.”The choice between Trump and Biden, Fain said, was clear. Trump has found support among the rank-and-file of the UAW despite Fain’s strong criticisms and union leadership’s consistent support of Democratic candidates.
Persons: Joe Biden, , ” Biden, Biden, Donald Trump’s, Shawn Fain, isn’t, It’s, “ Donald Trump, ” Fain, that’s, … Donald Trump, Fain, “ Joe Biden, Donald Trump, , ” Trump, I’ve, Trump, , Biden –, ” Shawn Fain, Ting Shen, Dan Kildee, ” Kildee, CNN’s Poppy Harlow, Joe Biden’s, Kildee Organizations: Washington CNN, United Auto Workers, Republican, GOP, UAW, Trump, Democratic Party, Great, Bloomberg, Michigan Democrat, Democratic, CNN, GM Locations: Washington ,, New Hampshire, Michigan, America, Israel, Gaza, Great Lakes State, Detroit
The IRS has challenged investment funds over who qualifies for an exception that limited partners get from federal self-employment taxes. Photo: Ting Shen for the Wall Street JournalThe Internal Revenue Service scored a significant win over the hedge-fund and asset-management industries this week in a case that could bring higher taxes for many fund managers. The U.S. Tax Court’s ruling could require managers to pay self-employment taxes of more than 3% on much of their income. If the opinion survives additional legal battles and is applied broadly, it would close off a popular technique that lets them exclude millions of dollars in income from self-employment taxes and related levies that others must pay.
Persons: Ting Shen Organizations: IRS, Wall Street, Internal Revenue Service, U.S, Tax
Killing Federal Agencies Is Easier Said Than Done
  + stars: | 2023-11-11 | by ( Andrew Restuccia | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
The Robert F. Kennedy Department of Justice Building in Washington, D.C. Photo: Ting Shen for The Wall Street JournalWASHINGTON—Republican candidates for president are pledging to shut down federal agencies if they win the White House. There is almost no chance they will succeed. Closing a government agency requires action by Congress. Convincing a majority of the House and Senate to close down agencies, many of which distribute billions of federal dollars to their states and districts, has proven nearly impossible for decades. While past presidents have reorganized and rebranded departments, Washington has never shut down a major cabinet-level agency, according to experts who follow the issue.
Persons: Robert F, Ting Shen Organizations: Kennedy Department of Justice, Wall Street Journal WASHINGTON, White Locations: Washington ,, Washington
Maryland Wins Bid for New FBI Headquarters Over Virginia
  + stars: | 2023-11-09 | by ( Sadie Gurman | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
The J. Edgar Hoover Building has been home to the FBI for nearly 50 years. Photo: Ting Shen for The Wall Street JournalThe Federal Bureau of Investigation will move from its crumbling home in downtown Washington to the Maryland suburbs, opening a new chapter in the tortured saga of the future of the bureau’s headquarters. The agency’s new main offices are set to be built in Greenbelt, Md., about 15 miles from the hulking, brutalist J. Edgar Hoover Building that has been its iconic home for nearly 50 years.
Persons: Edgar Hoover, Ting Shen, brutalist J Organizations: FBI, Wall Street, Federal Bureau, Investigation Locations: Washington, Maryland, Greenbelt, Md
The IRS and Democrats have emphasized that the tax agency’s additional funding is helping ordinary taxpayers. Photo: Ting Shen for the Wall Street JournalWASHINGTON—For everything, there is a season. Last winter, House Republicans kicked off their majority by trying to repeal almost all of the $80 billion that Congress gave the IRS in 2022 to improve technology and enforcement. This spring, in a debt-ceiling deal, Republicans got President Biden to agree that the IRS should give back $21.4 billion. House Republicans included even more IRS cuts in this summer’s spending bills for government agencies, and lawmakers are still arguing about those proposals.
Persons: Ting Shen, Biden Organizations: IRS, Wall Street Journal WASHINGTON, Internal Revenue Service, Republicans
The Internal Revenue Service has become more willing to argue that some corporate transactions are purely tax-motivated. Photo: Ting Shen for the Wall Street JournalThe Internal Revenue Service won a $109 million victory in federal court this week that will help the tax agency combat aggressive corporate tax maneuvers and collect more money from other companies. The IRS defeated telecommunications company Liberty Global , which used a maneuver it dubbed “Project Soy” to exploit a gap in the 2017 tax law and was seeking a refund.
Persons: Ting Shen Organizations: Internal Revenue Service, Wall Street, IRS, Liberty Global
A fine against Grand Canyon University is the latest action by the Biden administration that aims to root out misbehavior by institutions connected to the federal student-loan system. Photo: Ting Shen for The Wall Street JournalThe Biden administration accused Grand Canyon University of misleading doctoral students about tuition costs, imposing its first significant punishment to a college on Tuesday. The Education Department ordered the Phoenix-based Christian school to pay a fine of $37.7 million, the largest ever of its kind. The school, which has an enrollment of more than 100,000 on-campus and online, will also need to comply with a series of special disclosure requirements for the next few years.
Persons: Biden, Ting Shen Organizations: Grand Canyon University, Wall Street, Education Department
The Education Department said that around 2.5 million borrowers didn’t receive billing statements from Mohela according to schedule. Photo: Ting Shen for The Wall Street JournalThe Education Department will withhold a $7.2 million monthly payment for a major student loan processor because it failed to send out timely billing notices to millions of borrowers. The Monday move against Mohela, the Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority, comes as the government and the contractors who handle the billing and repayment program enrollment for federal student loans struggle with returning 28 million borrowers to repayment after a more than three-year pandemic-era pause.
Persons: Ting Shen Organizations: Education Department, Wall Street, Mohela, Missouri Higher Education Loan Authority Locations: Missouri
The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board is in the middle of a transformation under Chair Erica Williams, who took the helm in January 2022. Photo: Ting Shen for The Wall Street JournalThe process to inspect the audits of U.S. public companies needs an upgrade, according to some of the people who should know best—former inspectors who did the work over the last two decades. Former inspectors of the U.S. auditing watchdog say inspections are a useful tool for detecting potential deficiencies in audits of public companies, but that public reports on the process are limited in scope, lack details and not released in a timely fashion.
Persons: Erica Williams, Ting Shen Organizations: Public Company, Wall Street
Parents thinking of saving for their children's college education in around a decade could be in for some sticker shock. Breaking down the costs U.S. college tuition inflation averaged 12% annually from 2010 to 2022, according to T. Rowe Price, citing research by Education Data Initiative . Even assuming a more modest 5% annual inflation rate, the estimated total college cost could be as high as $383,823, she said. That college tuition bill 10 years from now — taking the $165,000 as a baseline and assuming a 3% normalized inflation rate and tuition inflation of 6% — could hit $295,000, according to Ebright. "It is important to maintain some exposure to growth assets as tuition inflation has traditionally been higher than the broader economy," Shen said.
Persons: Laura Suter, AJ Bell, Rowe Price, Wenting Shen, Shen, Alan Ebright, they're, AJ Bell's Suter, Rowe Price's Shen, Berkshire Hathaway, Suter Organizations: CNBC, AJ, Education Data Initiative, College Board, Check Capital Management, University of California, Securities, Berkshire, Fidelity Emerging Markets, Companies, Fidelity Locations: U.S, Asia, Britain, United States, Berkshire
As U.S. Debt Surges, Europe Brings Its Own Under Control
  + stars: | 2023-10-22 | by ( Paul Hannon | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Rep. Thomas Massie, a Republican from Kentucky, wears a homemade national debt clock pin on Capitol Hill in January. Photo: Ting Shen/Bloomberg NewsThroughout the Covid-19 pandemic and then Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, both the U.S. and Europe borrowed heavily. Now with those emergencies in the rear-view mirror, a divergence has emerged: Even as the U.S. continues to let deficits rip, Europe’s are on track to narrow significantly. This is in contrast to a decade ago, when deficits in the wake of the global financial crisis pushed some members of the euro area to the brink of default. The lessons of that episode, coupled with eurozone rules, have served to impose discipline on European governments that for now is entirely absent in the U.S.
Persons: Thomas Massie, Ting Shen Organizations: Republican, Bloomberg, U.S Locations: Kentucky, Ukraine, Europe, U.S
The IRS move is part of the agency’s attempt to combat fraud and abuse in the tax credit, known as the ERC. Photo: Ting Shen for the Wall Street JournalWASHINGTON—The Internal Revenue Service opened an escape hatch from one of its major tax-enforcement campaigns, giving employers the ability to withdraw pending claims for a pandemic-era tax credit that has become a headache for the agency. Employers who haven’t received their refunds or cashed their checks for the employee-retention credit can now withdraw their claims without penalties or interest, even if they are already under audit. If the IRS accepts their withdrawal, it would effectively end an audit.
Persons: Ting Shen, haven’t Organizations: IRS, ERC, Wall Street Journal WASHINGTON, Internal Revenue Service, Employers
New York CNN —On Tuesday, the Supreme Court began hearing oral arguments in a case that will determine the fate of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The Supreme Court will have the final say on that, however. The consumer watchdog agency was created after the 2008 financial crisis by way of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. If the Supreme Court finds the CFPB’s funding structure unconstitutional, it could shutter the agency and invalidate all of its prior rulings. From listening to the case on Tuesday, though, Lynyak believes the Supreme Court will rule that the CFPB’s funding structure is constitutional.
Persons: Dodd, Frank Wall, Democratic Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Ting Shen, Wells, Sam Gilford, ” There’s, Joseph Lynyak III, Lynyak, , Noel Francisco, Francisco, , Sonia Sotomayor, Amy Coney Barrett Organizations: New, New York CNN, Supreme, Consumer Financial, Bureau, Community Financial Services Association of America, Appeals, Fifth Circuit, Frank Wall Street Reform, Consumer, Democratic, Harvard Law School, Federal Reserve, Bloomberg, Getty, , Mortgage Bankers Association, National Association of Homebuilders, National Association of Realtors, Bank of America, Court, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Congressional, CNN, Dorsey & Whitney, Republican Locations: New York, New Orleans, United States
Rep. Dean Phillips speaks when U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken testifies before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs on The Biden Administration's Priorities for U.S. Foreign Policy on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC., U.S., March 10, 2021. Ting Shen/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsWASHINGTON, Oct 1 (Reuters) - Democratic U.S. Representative Dean Phillips, who has floated a possible primary run against President Joe Biden for the 2024 election, has stepped down from his leadership role in the House of Representatives, Axios reported on Sunday, citing a statement. Reporting by Gram Slattery; editing by Grant McCoolOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Dean Phillips, Antony Blinken, Ting Shen, Joe Biden, Axios, Gram Slattery, Grant McCool Organizations: Foreign Affairs, The Biden, . Foreign, Rights, Democratic U.S, Representatives, Thomson Locations: Washington ,
The State Department building in Washington. The department and other U.S. government agencies issued the joint advisory Tuesday. Photo: Ting Shen for The Wall Street JournalDue-diligence companies and professional-services firms should weigh the risks of operating in China, the Biden administration said in an advisory that highlighted the continuing rift between the two countries as the U.S. cracks down on goods from China’s Xinjiang region that it says are linked to forced labor.
Persons: Ting Shen, Biden Organizations: Department, Wall Locations: Washington, China, U.S, China’s Xinjiang
Russian President Vladimir Putin grimaces during his joint press conference with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (not pictured), September 4,2023, in Sochi, Russia. Getty ImagesThe Biden administration is set to impose sanctions on five Turkish companies and a Turkish national on Thursday, accusing them of helping Russia evade sanctions and supporting Moscow in its war against Ukraine, a senior Treasury official said. Multiple senior U.S. officials, including Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo, have traveled to Turkey since Russia's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine as part of a pressure campaign to prevent any Turkish companies from helping Russia circumvent U.S. curbs. Wally Adeyemo, deputy U.S. Treasury secretary, speaks during a news conference at the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, Nov. 8, 2021. "These designations reflect our ongoing commitment to target individuals and entities who provide material support to sanctioned entities," the official added.
Persons: Vladimir Putin grimaces, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Biden, reconvenes, Wally Adeyemo, Ting Shen, we've Organizations: Turkish, Getty, Treasury, NATO, U.S, Department of Justice, Washington , D.C, Bloomberg Locations: Sochi, Russia, Moscow, Ukraine, Turkey, Washington, Ankara, Sweden, United States, Sea, Washington ,, Turkish
That popularity, the company says, is why browser and phone makers have chosen Google as their default search engine through revenue sharing agreements. It will also hear from Apple's Senior Vice President of Services Eddy Cue and Mozilla CEO Mitchell Baker, Google's lawyer said. Following opening statements, the DOJ lawyer questioned its first witness, as it begins what's known as its "case-in-chief." But it's important browsers pick the right search default, Schmidtlein said, as Mozilla learned when it switched its default from Google to Yahoo in 2014. WATCH: DOJ takes on Google in antitrust lawsuit over Google Search
Persons: Jonathan Kanter, Kevin Dietsch, Sundar Pichai, Services Eddy, Mitchell Baker, Google's, Sridhar Ramaswamy, Neeva, Hal Varian, Ting Shen, Varian, Kenneth Dintzer, Dintzer, Ditzner, Patterson Belknap Webb, William Cavanaugh, Joan Braddi, Braddi, Siri, Cavanaugh, Kent Walker, Williams, Connolly's John Schmidtlein, Schmidtlein, Denelle Dixon, Apple Organizations: Antitrust, Department of Justice, Getty, Google, Colorado, Washington , D.C, Apple's, Services, Mozilla, DOJ, AGs, Google Inc, Bloomberg, Microsoft, Federal Trade Commission, Apple, Samsung, Branch, Global Affairs, Inc, Yahoo, TechCrunch, CNBC, YouTube Locations: Washington , DC, Washington ,, Snowflake, Colorado, Siri
Hong Kong CNN —US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo will travel to China next week, a visit that coincides with a worsening slowdown in the world’s second largest economy. Gina Raimondo, US commerce secretary, speaks during the SelectUSA Investment Summit in National Harbor, Maryland, US, on Tuesday, May 2, 2023. The Commerce Department announced on Monday that it was removing 27 Chinese companies from US export controls. China’s Ministry of Commerce welcomed the decision, saying it was conducive to trade and reflected the interests of both sides. That was followed earlier this month by President Biden signing an executive order that limits US investment in certain tech sectors of the Chinese economy, including AI and quantum computing.
Persons: Gina Raimondo, Raimondo, , Craig Singleton, Ting Shen, Trump, Biden, , Washington, Donald Trump, It’s, Xi, Singleton, — Kylie Atwood, Jeremy Diamond Organizations: Hong Kong CNN — US, Washington, Foundation for Defense of Democracies, Commerce Department, Beijing, SelectUSA Investment, Bloomberg, Getty, China’s Ministry of Commerce, ” Eurasia Group, Apple, Nike, Intel, Microsoft, General Motors, US Treasury Department, Mintz Group, Bain & Company, Communist Locations: Hong Kong, China, Beijing, Washington, Shanghai, National Harbor , Maryland, United States, Europe, Japan, New York, court
Massive fires burning in remote areas – like some of those currently burning in northwestern Quebec – are often too out of control to do anything about. Ed Jones/AFP/Getty Images Smoke from wildfires in Canada shrouds the view of the Statue of Liberty on Friday in New York. Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images Smoke and haze is seen from the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC, on Tuesday, June 27. Matt McClain/The Washington Post/Getty Images Smoke from Canadian wildfires obscures the visibility in Pittsburgh on June 8. Another issue is the increase in the wildfires are caused by climate change, and are simultaneously making climate change worse.
Persons: ” Robert Gray, you’ve, they’re, “ There’s, don’t, , Daniel Perrakis, ” Gray, Shiraaz Mohamed, Gray, , ” Perrakis, Ed Jones, David Dee Delgado, Gary Hershorn, Haze, Gene J, Jim Watson, Megan Smith, Kamil Krzaczynski, Cpl Marc, Andre Leclerc, Drew Angerer, Shannon Stapleton, Ronald Reagan, Saul Loeb, Matt McClain, Emmalee Reed, Hannah Beier, Mandel Ngan, New York City, Timothy A, Clary, Mike Segar, John Minchillo, Shanita Hancle, Seth Wenig, Matt Rourke, Ting Shen, Matt Slocum, Amr Alfiky, John Meore, Leah Millis, George Washington, Peter Carr, Yuki Iwamura, Kareem Elgazzar, Carlos Osorio, Frank Franklin II, Merrily Cassidy, Spencer Colby, Jason Rock, BJ Fuchs, Anne, Sophie Thill, we’ve, it’s Organizations: CNN, Canadian Forest Service, Firefighters, Getty, ” “, Nature Conservancy, Rockefeller Center, North, Corbis, PNC Park, Major League Baseball, Pittsburgh Pirates, San Diego Padres, Traffic, Chesapeake, Lincoln Memorial, USA, People, Canadian Forces, Reuters, BC, Service, Xinhua, Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Washington Post, Bloomberg, Capitol, Trade, AP Transit, T, Alberta Wildfire, New, New York City, Getty Images Workers, Citizens Bank, Philadelphia Phillies, New York Yankees, Empire, George Washington Bridge, New York State Thruway, Cincinnati Enquirer, Cape Cod Times, Anadolu Agency, Canadian Press, AP, Wildfire Service, Communications, Space, NASA, Reuters Firefighters, Kamloops Fire Rescue, Shining Bank Locations: Wisconsin, Vermont, North Carolina, Canada, Quebec, Canadian, British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, Mexico, Costa Rica, Chile, Spain, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, South Korea, France, AFP, New Jersey, Manhattan, New York, North America, New, Pittsburgh, Stevensville , Maryland, Washington ,, Chicago, Lake Michigan, Mistissini, Ronald Reagan Washington, Arlington , Virginia, Washington, Philadelphia, Elmont , New York, Baltimore, Evansburg , Alberta, Brooklyn , New York, Piermont , New York, Fort Lee , New Jersey, George, West Nyack, New York's, New York City, Cincinnati, Rock Harbor, Massachusetts, Cape Cod, Ottawa, Fort Nelson, Shelburne County , Nova Scotia, Communications Nova Scotia, Shelburne , Nova Scotia, Fort St, John, Kamloops, Shining Bank , Alberta, Lytton
The FTC last updated its guides in 2012 after a review that it launched in late 2007. “For the average consumer, it’s impossible to verify these claims,” FTC Chair Lina Khan said in December when the review was launched. “It therefore is critical for the FTC’s framework on environmental claims to stay flexible and nimble,” Nestlé said in its public comment. Published comments from Procter & Gamble, L’Oréal and Unilever support keeping the current 60% threshold and say recyclable claims shouldn’t be based on how much of their products get recycled. Its CEO also said he hopes the Green Guides will be updated more regularly given the rapidly changing landscape of environmental marketing.
Persons: , Lina Khan, Nestlé, PIERRE ALBOUY, REUTERS Nestlé, Perrier, Johnson, Fisk Johnson, ” Johnson, , Sarah Dearman, Ting Shen, L’Oréal, Unilever didn’t, Keith Srakocic, S.C, Dieter Holger Organizations: U.S . Federal Trade, FTC, Green Guides, Justice Department, REUTERS, ” SC Johnson, Sustainable Business, Green, Recycling, Bloomberg, The Recycling, U.S . Environmental Protection Agency, Greenpeace, Procter & Gamble, L’Oréal, Unilever, ” Unilever, Guides, dieter.holger Locations: North America, Virginia, U.S
We remonstrate, but we act and stubbornly refuse to accept defeat in the long term. Start with some of the challenges DIS YTD mountain Disney YTD performance We got started too early with Walt Disney (DIS) and we got too close to the company. EMR YTD mountain Emerson Electric YTD performance Emerson Electric (EMR) infuriates me. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio.
There are two big watchers on our list for the week ahead, and one of them — believe it or not — is not an inflation reading. The consumer price report (CPI), which calculates the average change over time in prices shoppers pay for goods and services, comes out Wednesday before the opening bell. Other data next week includes the producer price index report on Thursday and the retail sales report on Friday. ET: Consumer Price Index 2:00 p.m. The most important macroeconomic update of the week came on Friday while the market was closed for Good Friday.
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