Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Henkel"


16 mentions found


When “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” hit theaters in October 1974, audiences were horrified – and enthralled. Yet the elevated carnage of “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” was a new world. Gunnar Hansen as Leatherface in "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre." Now that “Texas Chainsaw” is turning fifty, there are screenings in theaters all across the US, limited-time merchandise and cast and crew reunions. Here lies the classic slasher film … or so it seemsMichael Myers (played by Tony Moran) waits to strike in "Halloween."
Persons: Tobe Hooper, Kim Henkel, , , ” Henkel, , Marion Crane, baddie, Leatherface ”, – you’ll, Hooper, Henkel, ” “, Gunnar Hansen, Leatherface, Everett, Roger Ebert, Joshua Dysart, Dysart, ” Dysart, Kirk, Heather Langenkamp, Wes Craven, Craven, Lagenkamp, slashers, , Jourdain Searles, Searles, ” Searles, “ It’s, Casey, Drew Barrymore, Ghostface, Carmen Electra, Michael Myers, Tony Moran, Shutterstock Dysart, there’s, Alex Svensson, Svensson, Jamie Lee Curtis, Ryan Green, “ Svensson, Wes Craven’s, Casey Becker, Jason Vorhees Organizations: CNN, The, Texas, Cannes Film, , Hollywood, ITV, Emerson College, Locations: Texas, The Texas, Austin, Los Angeles, Corpus Christi, Nancy
The data, compiled by NielsenIQ, showed overall sales volumes for shower gel, tampons, dishwashing products, laundry detergent and toilet paper declined in the year ended Sept. 17. Reuters GraphicsMajor brands like Ariel laundry detergent and Dove soaps have for years dominated the market versus retailers' private label goods. But the NielsenIQ data shows volumes for private label personal products are inching up while those for big brands decline. For instance, shower gel volumes fell 6% overall and 10% for big brands but rose 14% for private label products. Similarly, while laundry detergent volumes were down about 2% across the category and fell 10% for big brands, they surged 28% for private label brands.
Persons: Sarah Meyssonnier, NielsenIQ, Anton Delbarre, Emmanuel Macron's, Bernstein, Bruno Monteyne, Alexandre Bompard, Henkel, Eurocommerce, Richa Naidu, Helen Reid, Matt Scuffham, Catherine Evans Organizations: Carrefour, REUTERS, Unilever, Reuters, Nestle, Pepsico, Reuters Graphics, Consumer, Procter, Gamble, Delbarre, Thomson Locations: Montesson, Paris, France
But food prices have continued to climb in France and many other countries even after energy and agricultural commodity costs fell sharply this year. In July, food prices in France were 12.7% higher than a year earlier, compared with a 13.7% increase in June. Retailers say part of the reason why France is struggling to cut prices more aggressively lies with the way retail prices are set in the country. HOW DO FRANCE'S RETAILERS SET PRICES? HOW ARE FOOD PRICES LINKED TO RAW MATERIALS?
Persons: Eric Gaillard, Bruno Le Maire, Le Maire, Les Mousquetaires, Emmanuel Macron's, Olivier Bompard, Henkel, Sybille De La Hamaide, Silvia Aloisi, Mark Potter Organizations: Carrefour, REUTERS, Rights, Finance, Retailers, Procter, Gamble, Unilever, Thomson Locations: Nice, France, Ukraine
"We are seeing a non-spending tsunami in France," Chairman and Chief Executive Alexandre Bompard told Franceinfo radio. The government is eager to get food inflation - more than twice the overall French inflation rate of 5.1% in July - on a downward path, wary that such high levels could undermine fragile consumer confidence. 'SITUATION OF DEPRIVATION'"They see their margins increase while the French are in a situation of deprivation," Bompard told Franceinfo. On Tuesday, Le Maire vowed to step up pressure on retailers and producers to accelerate price cuts. "I am meeting retailers tomorrow and the producers the day after tomorrow ... with one objective: accelerate the fall of prices."
Persons: Alexandre Bompard, Sarah Meyssonnier, Bompard, FinMin Le Maire, Bruno Le Maire, Henkel, Franceinfo, Le Maire, Dominique Vidalon, Geert de Clercq, Silvia Aloisi, David Goodman, Conor Humphries Organizations: Carrefour, Entrepreneurs de France, Paris, Paris Longchamp Racecourse, REUTERS, Wednesday PARIS, Finance, Retailers, Procter, Gamble, Unilever, G, Henkel, Thomson Locations: Paris Longchamp, Paris, France, Carrefour
Competition for buy-side jobs, including at private equity firms and hedge funds, can be fierce. Insider identified the 13 recruiting firms aspiring dealmakers and traders should know for a buy-side job. The buy-side hiring spree is expected to continue despite a slowdown in mergers and acquisitions — a cornerstone of private equity investing. BellCast Partners works with mega funds, middle market funds, infrastructure funds, impact funds, real estate private equity funds, sector-focused funds, sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and credit funds. Today it does searches in private equity, growth equity, distressed, credit, venture capital, hedge funds, family offices, and select investment banks.
Persons: headhunting, Brain O'Callaghan, John Arbolino, Arbolino, Amity, Pamela Esterson, Susanna Nichols, Nichols, Esterson, Danielle Caston Strazzini, Alison Bellino Johnson, BellCast, Caston Strazzini, Jill Pierce, Spencer Stuart, Pierce, , Brian O'Callaghan, it's, Renee Hylton, Keith Mann, Josh Grauer, Grauer, Mann, Adam Zoia, Annette Krassner, Katie Cunningham, Sarah Armstrong, Cunningham, Armstrong, Anna Brady, Janelle Matthews, Beth Grossman, Brady, they've, Morgan Stanley Eleni Henkel, Henkel, Leah Trabich, HSP, Carlyle, Warburg Pincus, Adam Kahn, Kahn, Anthony Keizner, Keizner, Nina Swift, Marty Brady, Vedica Qalbani, Qalbani, Lindsey Mead, Jessica Wu, Michael Garmisa, SearchOne, Sheri Gellman, Gellman Organizations: Citadel, nab, Boothroyd, Co, Wall, Amity Search Partners, Palm Beach Staff, SG Partners, Bain Capital, Centerbridge Partners, Trian Partners, BellCast, Charlotte Staff, CPI, BellCast Partners, Investor Relations, Nashville, San Francisco, Wharton, Harvard, Stanford, New York Staff, Partners, San Francisco Staff, Los Angeles Staff, TPG, Thoma Bravo, Bessemer Venture Partners, EQT, Elliott, Equity, KKR, ICONIQ, Spectrum Equity, Henkel Search, Search Partners, New York, Oxbridge, Nashville Staff, Time Warner, Indiana University, SG Locations: New York, San Francisco, Austin, San Diego, Chicago, Los Angeles , New York, Phoenix, West Coast, Los Angeles, NYC, California, United States, Boston, Dallas, Atlanta, Columbia, Latin America, Asia, Europe, San Francisco , New York, Bay, Gold, Los Angeles , Greenwich, Nashville, Amity, South Florida
“How can I speak of love when I’m dead?” runs a powerful line in “Amour,” a stage adaptation of Michael Haneke’s 2012 film that premiered on Sunday at the Salzburg Festival, in Austria. Love and death are, of course, the two great themes of art, but rarely have they been brought together so hauntingly as in Haneke’s film, a portrait of an elderly couple forced to confront the issue of when life is no longer worth living. Told in Haneke’s characteristically severe style, the film earned the Austrian director both a Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival and an Oscar for best foreign language film. Henkel scored a triumph in Salzburg two summers ago with “Richard the Kid and the King,” a sweeping epic of Shakespeare’s bloodthirsty monarch that ran to four hours. The German director’s “Amour” — a co-production with the Münchner Kammerspiele theater, in Munich, where it will run in late October — is as affectingly tender as her earlier Salzburg outing was grimly savage.
Persons: I’m, , Michael Haneke’s, Love, Palme, Oscar, Karin Henkel, Henkel, “ Richard the Kid, Organizations: Salzburg Festival, Cannes Film Locations: , Austria, Austrian, Salzburg, Munich
Panic is setting in at investment banks across Wall Street as junior bankers are thrust into the whirlwind of private equity recruiting. Private equity recruiting is an annual Wall Street ritual, albeit an unwelcome one for some investment banks. Coffee chats vs on-cycleWhich private equity firms are recruiting and when is somewhat murky — for good reason. Private equity firms have also begun hosting events, including an invite-only networking social with KKR Thursday night and online information sessions hosted by Hellman & Friedman Wednesday. "I know it's crazy, but it's in your best interest to decide upfront whether you want to pursue private equity," he said.
Persons: I'm, Evercore, Asif Rahman, Friedman, Apax, Hellman, that's, Matt Ting, It's, Ting, they'll, Reed Alexander Organizations: Oasis, Henkel, Advisors, KKR, Hellman, Industry, headhunters, Permira Locations: Wall, New York
BERLIN, June 3 (Reuters) - German consumer goods company Henkel (HNKG.DE) is sticking to its goal in terms of acquisitions despite raising interest rates, the company's CEO Carsten Knobel told the German newspaper Rheinische Post on Saturday. "We have a strong balance sheet, we intend to make further acquisitions," he said, adding that acquisitions would be made in the adhesive business and in the consumer goods area. Knobel does not see interest rates increases as a problem. "The return of rising interest rates rather benefits us when competing for acquisition targets because we have the best credit ratings thanks to our very solid financial position." "For us to buy back our Russian business, the framework conditions and relations with Russia would have to change fundamentally," Knobel said.
Persons: Carsten Knobel, Henkel's, Knobel, Maria Martinez, David Evans Organizations: Henkel, Thomson Locations: BERLIN, Russia
"All the plastic we've ever produced since the inception of the material is still here," said David Katz, CEO of Plastic Bank, a company that's trying to implement plastic recycling systems in developing nations. It's usually because it's not economically feasible to collect, clean and sort plastic waste — at least not in the U.S., where new plastic is cheaper. Asis Wijayanto and his wife Atmawati support themselves and their daughter by collecting plastic with Plastic Bank. Plastic creditsBut only about 20% of Plastic Bank's partners are actually buying recycled plastic for use in new products. The other 80% are buying plastic credits, meant to help offset their new plastic production by funding recycling efforts in the countries where Plastic Bank operates.
PATRIK STOLLARZ | AFP | Getty ImagesAfter Russian troops invaded Ukraine in February 2022, companies across the G-7 major economies and the European Union announced plans to cease business operations in Russia. The report published earlier this month documented a total of 2,405 subsidiaries owned by 1,404 EU and G-7 companies that were active in Russia at the time of the first military incursion into Ukraine. Of the EU and G-7 companies remaining in Russia, the research found that 19.5% were German, 12.4% were American owned, and 7% were Japanese multinationals. Various companies told Barclays that there were a host of challenges to fully divest. "There have also been suggestions that the assets (including intellectual property) of companies that leave Russia will be nationalised."
Factbox: European companies cut jobs as economy sputters
  + stars: | 2023-01-17 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
REUTERS/Stephane MaheJan 17 (Reuters) - Decades-high inflation and the impact of war in Ukraine have forced companies across Europe into lay-offs or hiring freezes. * HUSQVARNA (HUSQb.ST): the garden equipment and tools maker announced in late October it will cut 1,000 jobs, the vast majority of them related to the shift from petrol to battery-powered tools. * SIEMENS GAMESA (SGREN.MC): the Spanish wind turbine maker in late September said it plans to cut 2,900 jobs, mostly in Europe, as part of a plan to return to profitability. * CLAS OHLSON (CLASb.ST): the Swedish hardware store chain said in December it would cut about 85 full-time jobs amongst other measures to deliver cost savings and reduced depreciation. BANKS AND FINANCIALS* KLARNA: Dagens Industri reported in May the Swedish payments company would lay off about 10% of its 7,000 employees.
REUTERS/Evgenia NovozheninaDec 7 (Reuters) - Decades-high inflation and the impact of war in Ukraine have forced companies across Europe into lay-offs or hiring freezes. * FINNAIR (FIA1S.HE): the Finnish airline will cut about 150 jobs, of which 90 are in its home country, as part of a plan to return to profitability. * MICHELIN (MICP.PA): the tyre maker plans to cut up to 1,600 jobs in France, fewer than the 2,300 estimated in its initial voluntary redundancy plan as it seeks to safeguard production. * HUSQVARNA (HUSQb.ST): the garden equipment and tools maker will cut 1,000 jobs, the vast majority of them related to the shift from petrol to battery-powered tools. * H&M (HMb.ST): the Swedish fashion giant, which employs roughly 155,000 people, will cut some 1,500 jobs as part of a 2 billion crown ($189.5 million) savings drive.
Factbox: European companies cuts jobs as economy sputters
  + stars: | 2022-12-07 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
REUTERS/Evgenia NovozheninaDec 7 (Reuters) - Decades-high inflation and the impact of war in Ukraine have forced companies across Europe into lay-offs or hiring freezes. * FINNAIR (FIA1S.HE): the Finnish airline will cut about 150 jobs, of which 90 are in its home country, as part of a plan to return to profitability. * MICHELIN (MICP.PA): the tyre maker plans to cut up to 1,600 jobs in France, fewer than the 2,300 estimated in its initial voluntary redundancy plan as it seeks to safeguard production. * HUSQVARNA (HUSQb.ST): the garden equipment and tools maker will cut 1,000 jobs, the vast majority of them related to the shift from petrol to battery-powered tools. * H&M (HMb.ST): the Swedish fashion giant, which employs roughly 155,000 people, will cut some 1,500 jobs as part of a 2 billion crown ($189.5 million) savings drive.
The Tweedy, Browne International Value Fund has outperformed 99% of peers over the past 15 years. Few funds have been a better bet than the Tweedy, Browne International Value Fund (TBGVX) over the past three decades. Perhaps most impressive is that the $5.8 billion Tweedy, Browne International Value Fund has topped 99% of funds in its category in the past 15 years, according to Morningstar. Insider spoke with Wyckoff, Shrager, and Hill about their investing process and where they see opportunities for international stocks in 2023. Value stocks and international companies should outperform their growth and US-based peers, in his view.
Insider breaks down the four qualities he said in his book were key toward boosting productivity. He developed the so-called the FASE method — focus, attention, systematization, and energy — for boosting productivity. In his 2017 book, "Lead Yourself: The Definitive Method to Be More Productive," Peralt wrote that four key qualities are essential to boosting productivity. "You need to be motivated and hungry to have a reason to start the process because, undoubtedly, it requires effort," Peralt wrote. An action-oriented attitudeAccording to Peralt, one of the most important qualities you need to improve your productivity is an action-oriented attitude.
Factbox: Companies count the cost of ditching Russia
  + stars: | 2022-11-03 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +6 min
INDITEX (ITX.MC)Zara owner will book a provision of 216 million euros after agreeing to sell its Russia stores to UAE-based Daher Group. TRATON (8TRA.DE)Volkswagen's (VOWG_p.DE) truck division Traton in September said disposing of some assets in Russia would cause a 550 million euro loss. CREDIT AGRICOLE (CAGR.PA)Credit Agricole provisioned more than 500 million euros related to its Russian exposure in Q1. LINDEThe world's largest industrial gases company's exit from Russia recorded impairments of $993 million from its Russia exit. SIEMENS (SIEGn.DE)The Munich-based engineering and tech firm said in May it would take a 600 million euro hit in Q2 for exiting Russia.
Total: 16