Word: analysts
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...popular website than Google but not as lucrative. Yahoo!'s 500 million monthly visitors easily exceeds Google's 380 million. But Google searches each generate about 30% to 40% more revenue. "Yahoo! is three to four years behind Google in the development of its algorithm," says Jordan Rohan, an analyst with RBC Capital Markets...
...this is a bubble, is it about to burst? Maybe not. Peter Alexander, chief analyst for Z-Ben Advisors, a Shanghai investment consultancy, says Chinese companies are stronger and more efficient than they were a few years ago. "It's dangerous to bet against China," he says. Also, if you exclude China Life and banks that fueled last year's blockbuster IPOs, Shanghai stocks trade at prices comparable to those of Asian companies listed on other regional bourses. In fact, some of China's smaller manufacturing and textiles companies are still relatively undervalued. "Judging from history, the stock market doesn...
CHARLES PAYNE, a financial analyst, about the CNBC business journalist who came under fire for her cozy relationships with sources after the resignation of a Citigroup executive was tied to his lavish spending, including trips with Bartiromo on the company...
...market correction is not inevitable, says Peter Alexander, chief analyst for Z-Ben Advisors, a Shanghai investment consultancy. He argues that Chinese companies are stronger and more efficient than they were a few years ago. "It's dangerous to bet against China," he says. Also, if China Life and banks that fueled last year's blockbuster IPOs are excluded from the picture, Shanghai stocks trade at prices comparable to those of Asian firms listed on other regional bourses. In fact, some of China's smaller manufacturing and textile companies are still relatively undervalued. "Judging from history, the stock market doesn...
...anxiety over the possibility of a military confrontation with the U.S. in Iraq and further damage to Iran's international position has the country's leaders locked in sober, closed-door consultations. And Tehran's most influential businessmen are again debating whether to transfer their assets abroad. Says political analyst Saeed Laylaz: "At the highest levels of the regime, the situation today is being taken very, very seriously...