Word: digitalizing
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...worth noting that listening to Soros listen to his money is an awfully fun activity. Ring. Hello? Yes, YES, YES!! Followed by several minutes of nine-digit bets on market moves that are here left off the record, by agreement. This is what Soros will say: he is up 9.5% to 10%. "A terrible two months for the market," he says as he shakes his head. Then, brightening: "But a great two months for hedge funds!" Soros thinks the U.S. is coming in for a hard landing. Fed rate cuts, he worries, won't come fast enough. Tax cuts...
Should we get our economic prognostications wrong this year, let Alan Greenspan be our alibi. The Fed Chairman, like everybody else, seems unsure of what to make of the U.S. economy. In mid-January, Greenspan sent the recently-revitalized Dow back into four-digit territory with just a few downbeat words about "significant risks" left in the economy...
...Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, a strong Mercer team, and the perennially competitive Navy Midshipmen. The Crimson, despite a draining loss at Georgia Tech, bounced back to beat Mercer two days later. And although Harvard went on to lose to Navy, the streak had been preserved with a gutsy double-digit win over a quality opponent...
KNOW THE SCORE Credit scores (the three-digit indicator of your loan risk, available only to lenders) may soon become much more accessible. A California law passed this fall requires the main credit bureaus, Equifax, Trans Union and Experian, to honor consumer requests for credit scores. Now these three are considering making scores and explanations accessible nationally. Congress has also begun looking at a requirement for greater openness--one more factor pushing the bureaus to open...
...through the worst of it in the next six months, as many economists believe, then the stock market could begin to recover right away as it looks ahead to the next expansion. That's how bull markets are born. Indeed, many on Wall Street predict double-digit returns from the Dow and S&P 500 in 2001. The tech-laden NASDAQ they see as more problematic, but still going higher...