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Musk appeared to give Tesla's board an ultimatum on Monday, saying he wants 25% voting control at Tesla or he'll stop growing AI development at the electric-car maker. One way of getting that would be via a dual-class stock structure. This isn't uncommon and could mean Musk wouldn't necessarily get more shares but that the ones he held would deliver more voting power. The company's dual-class stock structure provides Zuckerberg and select executive managers and directors with them. "Zuckerberg probably wouldn't have gone public without a dual-class structure," White said.
Persons: , Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Musk, he's, Tesla, Zuckerberg, It's, Chester Spatt, Joshua Tyler White, doesn't, White, Ofer Eldar, Michael Dell, Anat Alon, Beck, Erik Gordon, Sam Altman's, Gordon Organizations: Service, Meta, Tesla, Business, Carnegie Mellon University, SEC, Vanderbilt, SpaceX, The Boring Company, UC Berkeley, Western Reserve University, University of Michigan's Ross School of Business Locations: Delaware, OpenAI
While executive stock sales — such as Dimon's planned transactions next year — are not universally red flags, they can get complicated. Insider stock sales Executive stock trades are usually disclosed through SEC filings known as Form 4 documents and accessible through the regulator's EDGAR database — the electronic data gathering, analysis, and retrieval system. Rule 10b5-1 trading plans came into the fold just over two decades ago to reconcile these two discordant facts. Adopting Rule 10b5-1 trading plans gives public-company executives a way to protect against allegations of illegal insider trading in the future. Compared with a tiny stock sale executed through a predetermined plan, executive stock buys generally send a much stronger signal: The executive wants to make money, too.
Persons: Jamie Dimon, Dimon, Jim Cramer, Jim, Eliezer Fich, Dimon's, EDGAR, Chester Spatt, Spatt, , Susan Li, Drexel's, Wharton, Drexel's Fich, Fich, I'm, Nancy Quan's, Quan, Marc Benioff, Carnegie Mellon's Spatt, Benioff, Howard Schultz, Schultz's, Schultz, Carnegie Mellon's, Nikesh Arora, Arora, Charles Scharf, Wells, Sehwa Kim, Kim, Foot, Mary Dillon, Locker, Dillon, Foot Locker, Jim Cramer's, Al Drago Organizations: JPMorgan Chase, JPMorgan, Dow Jones Industrial, Wall, Dimon, Pfizer, Capitol, Drexel University, Club, Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC, Carnegie Mellon's Tepper School of Business, CNBC, Stanford University, University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, Stanford, Cola, Salesforce, Carnegie, Starbucks, Palo Alto Networks, Alto Networks, Broadcom, Federal Reserve, Washington Service, Columbia Business School, JPMorgan Chase &, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: U.S, Coke, Salesforce, FL
Mortgage rates have run up so far and so fast this year that many would-be homebuyers can no longer afford to buy a home. By fall, mortgage rates had more than doubled, eventually topping 7% in October. When Treasury yields go up, so do mortgage rates; when they go down, mortgage rates tend to follow. “We have to remember mortgage rates come down much slower than they go up,” said Cohn. “Volatility increases the level of mortgage rates, compared to Treasury rates, because of the prepayment option,” said Chester Spatt, professor of finance at Carnegie Mellon University’s Tepper School of Business.
The Federal Reserve raised the target federal funds rate by 0.75 percentage point for the fourth time in a row on Wednesday, marking an unprecedented pace of rate hikes. The federal funds rate, which is set by the central bank, is the interest rate at which banks borrow and lend to one another overnight. As the federal funds rate rises, the prime rate does, as well, and your credit card rate follows suit within one or two billing cycles. Still, it's not the interest rate but the sticker price of the vehicle that's causing an affordability problem, McBride said. Federal student loan rates are also fixed, so most borrowers won't be impacted immediately by a rate hike.
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