Friday, May 3, 2019

Darden: Bad Medicine? The Side Effects of Central Bank Mispricing

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Big medical problems often require significant doses of strong pharmaceuticals. Unfortunately, the medicines often come hand-in-glove with unwanted side effects.

The same is true in economics. Read more here.

Photo by JOSHUA COLEMAN on Unsplash


Thursday, May 2, 2019

Korn Ferry: HR Is (Still) Battling #MeToo Challenges

By SIMON CONSTABLE

The MeToo era may have laid bare how many organizations have a long way to go to create a harassment-free workforce, but the last few days has shown where some of the toughest challenges lie: the human resources department. Read more here.

Photo by Mihai Surdu on Unsplash

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

TheStreet: Defense Company L3 Technologies Smashes Expectations With Q1 Results

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Defense company L3 Technologies smashed analysts' expectations with its first-quarter results Wednesday.

L3 reported earnings of $2.71 a share in the first quarter. Earnings adjusted for non-recurring items were even better at $2.89 a share, up from an adjusted $2.34 a share in the same period a year before. 

Analysts expected the company to earn $2.51 a share. Read more here.

TheStreet: Amgen's First-Quarter Earnings Slump as Expenses Jump

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Amgen posted first-quarter earnings that fell from a year earlier but the results beat analysts' expectations. 

The biotech company reported earnings per share of $3.18 for the first three months of the year vs. $3.25 for the same period in 2018. Adjusted earnings in the quarter were $3.56 a share, above forecasts of $3.48. Read more here.

TheStreet: Massachusetts Hits Wynn Resorts With $35 Million Fine

By SIMON CONSTABLE

The Massachusetts Gaming Commission hit Wynn Resorts with a $35 million fine and slammed CEO Matt Maddox over his mishandling of the sexual misconduct allegations against founder Steve Wynn.

The casino company, however, will get to keep its gaming license in the state. Read more here.

Photo by Scott Webb on Unsplash

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Forbes: Europe's Jobless Rate Drops, But It's Still Way Higher Than The U.K.'s

By SIMON CONSTABLE

To read some reports, you'd think Europe's single currency area was at the height of an economic boom.

While the European Union's single currency area now has its lowest unemployment rate in over a decade, that indicator is still a lot higher than the jobless rate in the U.K. And other metrics suggest that the former won't catch up with the latter anytime soon and the divide could even get wider. Read more here.

Photo by Clem Onojeghuo on Unsplash


Forbes: Mass Protests Planned In Venezuela Wednesday, Amid Tightening U.S Sanctions

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Things are bad in socialist Venezuela, and they could be about to get even worse.

Massive planned demonstrations this week combined with the possibility of even tighter U.S. sanctions on the country could push the beleaguered state even deeper into its economic malaise.

The country is already suffering the rare and nasty phenomenon of hyperinflation which is quickly destroying the economy. Read more here.