Posts Tagged ‘Tour de France’

The Week Unpeeled

Big news week all around, with headlines too close to home on the shooting outside the Empire State Building on Friday to a big week for Apple, which first became the largest US company ever by market-cap value, besting Microsoft at nearly $625 billion, making the company an economic but also social powerhouse.  Apple then won a “sweeping victory” in its court battle against Samsung ($1.05 billion in damages) when jurors found Samsung infringed on several patent issues, which may affect how competing smartphones are designed.

Elsewhere:

  • Prince Harry exposes himself and most of the media did anything but help him cover up, despite palace warnings (pleas) to keep what happened in Vegas for Harry in Vegas;
  • Lance Armstrong was stripped of all his record seven Tour de France titles after announcing that he will no longer fight anti-charges against him (and The Wall Street Journal on Saturday distastefully repeated a joke from one comic on Lance that he now doubts “Amstrong’s story that he walked on the moon” even though Neil Amstrong had just died);
  • The Dow declined for the week despite a Friday rally to end to close down 0.9 percent to 13,157;
  • “The Office” announced that it this was its last season and that Dwight no doubt will end up a beet farmer;
  • Phyllis Diller, American comedienne died, and Augusta National admitted its first two female members (In interesting juxtaposition, a Diller tribute on the front page of The New York Times Tuesday showed a picture of Ms Diller pointing right and apparently laughing to the neighboring story on Masters story on finally admitting women;
  • The U.K. economy shrank less than initially estimated in the second quarter after construction and production output were revised to show a smaller slump;
  • Thousands of Aviva's UK employees are in fear for their jobs after the FTSE 100 insurer released a statement warning it could currently guarantee only 70pc of their jobs;
  • Standard & Poor's has downgraded its outlook for HSBC Holdings from stable to negative. HSBC has already set aside $700m (£442m) to cover potential fines for channeling funds from countries such as Iran, Mexico and Syria, in breach of US anti-money laundering regulations; and
  • Diageo, the world's biggest producer of spirits, has reported a big jump in annual profits, thanks in part to strong sales and acquisitions in emerging markets. End of Story
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The Week Unpeeled

Greece and the fate of the euro continued to dominate headlines and the attention of the investment community, with markets rallying through the week, and the Dow ending after back-to-back triple-digit gains Thursday and Friday at 12,767.  A narrow victory by the Greek conservatives on Sunday will likely be somewhat positive but tough times still ahead for the Continent, no doubt.

Elsewhere:

  • Ex-Goldman and P&G director, Rajat Gupta, was found guilty of securities fraud and conspiracy last week and could face up to 20 years in prison;
  • JP Morgan chief, Jamie Dimon, apologized to Congress in his defense of the bank, described in the media as both “proud,” “cool” and “contrite”;
  • Lance Armstrong is facing doping charges from the US Anti-Doping Agency, which could put into question his seven Tour de France titles;
  • President Obama, using existing legal authority, is permitting young migrants to stay in the US, which means as many as 800,000 will avoid deportation;
  • David Cameron appeared at the Leveson inquiry into press standards to refute the idea of any deals with the Murdoch empire;
  • The UK government announced its proposals for banking reforms, which will ring fence retail banking from riskier investment banking activity to prevent taxpayers having to bail out banks again;
  • The majority of Media and advertising firm WPP's shareholders rebelled against the company’s remuneration report;
  • Complimentary copies of Bloomberg Business Week were banned from London City Airport due to their controversial cover on “How to sell drugs”;
  • A seventh-generation member of the Fly Wallendas became the first person to walk across the Niagara Falls on a tightrope CJP
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