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Just weeks before a pregnant porbeagle shark was expected to give birth, one of the two tracker tags marine scientists had placed on the animal floated to the surface near Bermuda. Of 11 porbeagle sharks researchers tagged, eight were pregnant, including this one. Before this, researchers didn’t think it was even possible that porbeagle sharks could be preyed upon, she added. The team’s original goal was to trace pregnant porbeagle sharks throughout their pregnancy and figure out where the creatures typically go to give birth. Porbeagle sharks are listed as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature because they were overfished beginning in the 1960s.
Persons: , , Brooke Anderson, ” Anderson, Jon Dodd “, Anderson, Matt Davis, Davis Organizations: Arizona State University, Marine, NASCAR, Maine Department of Marine Resources, International Union for Conservation Locations: Bermuda, Cape Cod , Massachusetts, believability,
"I need a transcript to be able to work with this," Kaplan told Habba. "Elaine's is a very popular restaurant, isn't it," Habba asked Carroll, of the celebrity-packed Upper East Side bar where she'd been a regular. Habba asked. Habba asked Carroll. Habba asked Carroll.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Jean Carroll's, Alina Habba, Carroll, Lewis Kaplan, Habba, tersely, Kaplan, it's, Mike Stobe, she'd, It's, I'm, Habba she'd, Trump, Roberta Kaplan, Jean Carroll, John Minchillo, we're, We're, we'll, Mary Altaffer, — Kaplan, Selcuk, CNN's Anderson Cooper, aren't, Kathy Griffin, Mary Trump, George Conway, Conway, Trump's, Ms, Kellyanne Conway Organizations: Service, Business, Trump, Trump National Golf Club, AP, White House, White, New York, Carroll, Getty Locations: Manhattan, Montana, Bedminster , New Jersey, New Jersey, Bedminster, Rodeo Queens, New York, earshot, Anadolu
Bridgewater rigged its "believability weighting" system to keep founder Ray Dalio on top, a new book says. That's according to "The Fund: Ray Dalio, Bridgewater Associates, and the Unraveling of a Wall Street Legend," out Tuesday from New York Times finance reporter Rob Copeland. Bridgewater's believability weighting system, in theory, was supposed to help determine how much weight a person's opinion carried and to help identify hidden talent within the firm. Bridgewater started experimenting with Dalio's believability weighting system with a prototype allowing staff to see each others' scores on a scale of 1-to-10, but Dalio wasn't pleased, the book said. In response to a request for comment from Insider on the book's assertions regarding the believability rating system, Bridgewater provided excerpts of letters that its lawyers sent to the book's publisher, St. Martin's Press.
Persons: Bridgewater, Ray Dalio, outranked, Dalio, , Rob Copeland, Dalio wasn't, He'd, Copeland Organizations: Service, Bridgewater Associates, New York Times, , Bridgewater, New, Martin's Press Locations: Bridgewater
There was the time when the parking staff was fired for designing parking passes deemed too big. When Dalio noticed a spill on the floor by his urinal, Copeland writes, he summoned a deputy to investigate. But for the most part, it has always been safer to be a lower-level drone than in Dalio’s direct orbit. Paul McDowell, tasked with designing the “Principles Operating System,” Copeland writes, “assigned an underling to go into the software and program a new rule. As the original, topmost believable person at Bridgewater, Dalio’s rating was now numerically bulletproof to negative feedback.
Persons: Dalio, Copeland, James Comey, Dalio’s browbeating, Paul McDowell, ” Copeland, Locations: Bridgewater
"We continue to believe this bull market is alive and well," wrote Brian Belski, the chief investment strategist at BMO Capital Markets, in an October 18 note. Just over a year ago, the S&P 500 snapped out of a 25% downturn that began in early 2022. "While this one-year gain is certainly not impressive by bull market standards, we believe it is notable since many entered the year prognosticating doom-and-gloom for US stocks," Belski wrote. Don't expect a second-year slump for stocksAll eyes are now on the S&P 500 as it enters the second year of a bull market. BMO Capital Markets22 buy-rated stocks to target nowStock-picking will be increasingly important if the S&P 500 falls under pressure, in BMO's view.
Persons: Brian Belski, Belski Organizations: BMO Capital Markets, BMO Capital, BMO Locations: Montreal
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailRenaissance's Jeff deGraaf weighs in on the believability of the market rallyJeff deGraaf, Renaissance Macro Group, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss whether investors should believe in the rally or not.
Persons: Jeff deGraaf Organizations: Macro
The first, CALLING THE MOON: 16 Period Stories From BIPOC Authors (Candlewick, 368 pp., $22.99, ages 10 and up), is an anthology of short stories and prose poems. The title “Calling the Moon” is a reference to menstruation, which usually happens once a month and which some of the anthology’s characters call a moon or luna. Many of the young characters are quick-thinking, improvising ways to handle an unexpected emergence of blood, including the wadding up of pieces of toilet paper as a method of absorption. But I blanched at her use of the word “menstruators” to encompass people who have periods but don’t identify as female. I have to think that we can come up with something else, maybe simply “people who have periods.”
Persons: Aida Salazar, Yamile Saied Mendez, Salazar, Mendez, There’s Penny, it’s, Eden, ” McCullough Organizations: THE, , Young, Casa Locations: Casa Esperanza
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