Word: investers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...defending his integrity, the less focus and authority he will keep. He was already having trouble abroad because, with the cold war over, even old allies have other fish to fry. Netanyahu refuses to be persuaded. Canada wants to do business with Cuba. France and Russia are rushing to invest in Iran. Government leaders in Malaysia and Singapore proclaim the superiority of "Asian values." Now the entropy can only get worse. Clinton's crisis will strengthen the resolve of those who resent American leadership and rattle the confidence of those who rely...
Business Bytes Looking for still yet another way to invest in the Dow? The American Stock Exchange is launching today an instrument that mirrors the performance of the bell-weather index of 30 blue chips. Details in Money Daily. Get the numbers by index or stock-by-stock
...stiff sell-off last week--the worst New Year's start in seven years--underscores that point. And with Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan now spouting off about possible deflation in the economy, it may pay to favor bonds for a while. I'd certainly be slow to invest any new wads of cash--say, a year-end bonus--all in the stock market. More on that later. First, let's take stock of the times...
Former neighbor Barbara Moline sees Seed in a different light. "He started conversations by telling you he deserved to be a Nobel prizewinner," she remembers. He was always dreaming up new crusades, she says. A few years ago, Seed invited Moline to invest $75,000 in his project to cure AIDS. Last summer he asked if the church could donate space to help support his cloning research. For Seed, Moline believes, cloning represents a "last, desperate attempt to become rich and famous. He wanted to make it big, but he never...
...Seed really worthy of all this attention, or should he be dismissed as harmless? TIME magazine has unearthed evidence that human cloning is not Seed's first money-seeking crusade ? former neighbor Barbara Moline says she was invited to invest $75,000 in a Seed scheme to cure AIDS. "He started conversations by telling you he deserved to be a Nobel prizewinner," Moline remembers. Not to mention that he's a physicist rather than a physician, and has no embryology experience. But lawmakers know a good enemy when they see one, and as long as he plays the mad scientist...