- Pfizer Broke Law by Promoting Drugs for Wrong Uses In Violation of Pledge Prosecutor Michael Loucks remembers clearly when lawyers for Pfizer Inc., the world’s largest drug company, looked across the table and promised it wouldn’t break the law again.
- Record Bonuses Return to Wall Street as Big Three May Award $29.7 Billion Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s investment bank, survivors of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, are set to pay record bonuses this year.
- Leipzig Becomes Most Modern Making BMWs in Back to Future Since Wall Fell Leipzig was the scene of protests that spread to Berlin and toppled communist East Germany in 1989. Since then, it has added jobs faster than any German city, east or west, as governments and companies led by Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, Amazon.com Inc. and Deutsche Post AG invested more than $17.8 billion.
- Tishman BlackRock Near Restructuring or Sale of New York's Stuyvesant Town Tishman Speyer Properties LP and BlackRock Realty, the owners of Manhattan’s Stuyvesant Town- Peter Cooper Village, moved closer to restructuring $3 billion in debt on the apartment complex as the property verges on default, Fitch Ratings said.
- Olympics Sponsors Beat S&P 500, MSCI World Before Vancouver: Chart of Day Stocks of Olympics sponsors are winning medals for investors even before the Vancouver Winter Games begin.
- Value Line Settlement May Prompt Split as Jean Bernhard Buttner Reign Ends Jean Bernhard Buttner never had much tolerance for people who broke her rules, says Jack Dempsey, who worked for her investment advisory firm Value Line Inc. until 2005.
- NBC Loss With Jay Leno Nobody's Gain as 1.7 Million 10 p.m. Viewers Vanish NBC’s exit from scripted series to air “The Jay Leno Show” weeknights at 10 p.m. has left 1.82 million young viewers up for grabs, and CBS and ABC have let most of them slip away six weeks into the television season.
Bllomberg Daily News 10th November 2009
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