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Facebook IPO debacle triggers legal debate
Allegations triggered by Facebook's IPO have investors wondering whether the social network gave non-public, material information to analysts that was then shared with select investors with lower earnings projections.Repeat Buyers Drive Home Sales As First-Time Buyers Lag
A growing share of repeat purchasers are driving the U.S. housing recovery, as appreciating property values and low mortgage rates give many the wherewithal to relocate. The same forces are also benefitting longer-term homeowners who had wanted to move and didn't want to sell until prices improved.Spain takes over Bankia, readies second bailout
Spain's bank bailout fund will convert its $5.8 billion of preferred shares in Bankia's parent company Banco Financiero y de Ahorros, or BFA, into voting sharesAs Bernanke awaits 2nd term, Fed mulls exit plan
Now that the U.S. economy is on the mend, the Federal Reserve this year can focus on how and when to pull back the stimulus money pumped out to fight the financial crisis. With his prospects for another term brightening, Fed chief Ben Bernanke will lead that effort.Sandusky scandal offers opportunity to learn lessons
Attorney Howard M. Talenfeld discusses the lessons all must learn from the Jerry Sandusky scandal and Florida's new law that requires educational institutions and their law enforcement agencies to report known or suspected child abuse.View more book results for the query "*"
Apple settles name dispute in China for $60 million
Apple agrees to pay $60 million to guarantee it has rights to the iPads name in China.Women losing out on U.S. boards as Europe gets help from quotas
At a time when European companies are filling board seats with women, U.S. female directors are losing out.Geithner's money fund overhaul push sparks new industry outcry
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner urged the Securities and Exchange Commission to pursue new rules for money-market mutual funds, triggering fresh opposition from industry leaders who had beaten back similar proposals and are pursuing a weaker overhaul.Capital Sources: Banks Look For Ways To Make Non-Interest Income
More banks are generating revenue growth from fees and other types of non-interest income as low interest rates flatten profit margins on new loans.Crowell & Moring sued by two U.S. clients in airplane hijacking
Two American victims of the 1986 hijacking of Pan Am Flight 73 in Pakistan have sued Washington's Crowell & Moring over its demand that they share their multimillion-dollar award with other Flight 73 victims represented by the law firm.Trending Stories
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