- American Companies Dodge $60 Billion in Taxes Even Tea Party Would Condemn Tyler Hurst swiped his debit card at a Walgreens pharmacy in central Phoenix and kicked off an international odyssey of corporate tax avoidance.
- Exporting Profits Imports U.S. Tax Reductions for Pfizer, Lilly, Oracle Over the past three years, Pfizer Inc. was an earner without profit in its own country.
- CEO Pay Breaks Glass Ceiling as Bartz Gets $42.7 Million With '09 Bonanza Chief executive officers’ pay is shattering the glass ceiling.
- Rajaratnam Says Cricket, Not Crime, Was on His Mind During Galleon Trades Galleon Group LLC co-founder Raj Rajaratnam had a ready answer for every question U.S. regulators put to him about possible insider trading three years ago.
- Moynihan Becomes Obama's Top Wall Street Ally on Financial-Rules Overhaul The Obama administration has found a banker it can do business with: Bank of America Corp.’s Brian Moynihan.
- Euro May Struggle to Survive Without Unifying Budget Policies, Snow Says Former U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow suggested the euro may not survive unless member nations agree to merge policies from budgets to labor markets.
- Prudential AIA Acquisition Costs May Increase on Plans to Sell Junior Debt Prudential Plc, Britain’s biggest insurer, may pay an extra $167.5 million a year in interest as it boosts capital to win regulatory approval for the acquisition of American International Group Inc.’s main Asian unit.
- Real Madrid Plans More Purchases After $300 Million Spree on Kaka, Ronaldo Real Madrid spent more than $300 million on assembling a team featuring Cristiano Ronaldo, Kaka and Karim Benzema in the last off-season. It’s not done yet.
- AstraZeneca's $520 Million U.S. Settlement Rewards Repeat Whistleblowers Blowing the whistle on drugmakers is becoming a habit for a salesman and a psychiatrist splitting a $45 million award after AstraZeneca Plc settled claims of illegally marketing a schizophrenia drug.
Bloomberg Daily News 14th May 2010
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