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Read The Interesting Snippets Below For Exciting Merchant Cash Advance News!
The Hardest Places to Live in the U.S.
– http://nytimes.com/ny
Breakingviews: Barclays falls back into deep end
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
Continue Reading On http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness »
Higher prices lift Lennar's revenue
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
Continue Reading On http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness »
GM prepares recall of top selling North American car
– http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness
Continue Reading On http://www.reuters.com/USVideoBusiness »
DealBook: Alibaba, Chinese Internet Giant, Picks N.Y.S.E. for Its Listing
– http://nytimes.com/ny
The choice is a major victory for the exchange, for what is expected to be one of the biggest initial public offerings in years. Alibaba’s ticker symbol will be “BABA.”Fox Joins Network Brethren in Wrapping Up Its ‘Upfront’ Ad Sales
– http://nytimes.com/ny
Carney Details New Weapons to Cool British Housing Market
– http://nytimes.com/ny
The moves announced by the governor of the Bank of England would restrict large mortgage loans as a way to curb market distortions.What’s the Matter With Eastern Kentucky?
– http://nytimes.com/ny
[Buzz_Burner_Fresh_Updates]

The search engine behemoth announced plans to incorporate its Android operating system in categories like wearable computers and autos.
A crosshatch of stock holdings allows Japan’s big corporations to protect one another from outside attempts to shake up management. The prime minister has taken aim at the practice.
Dov Charney’s dismissal raises all sorts of thorny corporate-governance questions for investors and boards about iconic — and notorious — leaders, especially in creative fields.
JetBlue’s new premium service between New York and Los Angeles, called Mint, is a departure from its egalitarian image.
The Manhattan district attorney’s office is using the Martin Act in its investigation of the financing of a New Jersey bridge repair.
Many companies insure their employees’ lives with themselves as beneficiaries, a practice some deride as immoral. But companies say the policies, for which they get tax breaks, help them bolster pensions and health care.
An internal investigation found that the company’s chief executive had allowed the posting of naked pictures of a female employee who had sued him.
The approval of the $13.5 billion deal essentially brings the long acquisition negotiations to an end, though a final deal hinges on the French state buying Alstom shares.
The story of Shanesha Taylor, a mother who had a job interview but was unable to find child care, shows the harsh realities of today’s economy.
Sports talk in the workplace, whether about the World Cup or the World Series, can exclude and alienate some employees.
When a family saves for future generations, it provides resources to finance capital investments, like the start-up of new businesses and the expansion of old ones.
With a huge audience but declining ad revenue, the company is pinning its revival on a constellation of sites, where news and advertising intertwine.
Abundant data, smart software and cheap sensors are beginning to make it possible to measure and monitor employees as never before.
In a surprise move, the French government will also buy a 20 percent stake in Alstom, becoming its largest shareholder.
The first commercial for the Nabi DreamTab, a computer tablet for children, is expected to be introduced on July 7.
G.E. is not altering the financial valuation of the $13.5 billion deal, but it is now proposing to create two joint ventures with Alstom: one in the power grid business and another in renewable energy.
Cellphone theft has been a growing problem. But police in several major cities say they are finally starting to see a dip in thefts of one of the most popular smartphones, Apple’s iPhone.
If it succeeds, the city’s cost-cutting hybrid pension plan could be a model for solving government budget crises across the country.
The Internet company joins Google, LinkedIn and a host of older tech companies in disclosing the gender and ethnic breakdown of its work force.
If it succeeds, the city’s cost-cutting hybrid pension plan could be a model for solving government budget crises across the country.
Brad Katsuyama, chief of the IEX Group who was featured in Michael Lewis’s recent book “Flash Boys,” voiced more measured criticisms of the market in testimony prepared for a Senate hearing.
Royal Dutch Shell said on Tuesday that it would offload the majority of its stake in Woodside Petroleum, Australia’s biggest independent oil and natural gas producer, in a deal worth $5.7 billion.
The entertainment company’s DreamHouse product will feature giant video screens and a virtual sleigh ride with Shrek.
Two professors have evidence of what has long been suspected: Insider trading is common, arising from perhaps a quarter of all public company deals.
While the company’s enthusiasts impatiently await new wizardry, the new chief executive is trying to make the brand bigger than the next big iThing.
What can go wrong in turning a bold idea into a business? A start-up company’s creative team counts the speed bumps.
Eric Cantor’s defeat last week in a primary to David Brat, who campaigned against Wall Street, led industry to mobilize to preserve its clout in Congress.
The Amaya Gaming Group will acquire the Oldford Group for $4.9 billion and pave the way for the brands Full Tilt Poker and PokerStars to re-enter the United States market.
Talks between the Justice Department and Citigroup have deteriorated in recent days, as the sides are deadlocked on how much money the bank should pay to settle a civil investigation into its sale of shoddy mortgage investments.
The cash deal moves Priceline, which also owns Kayak and Booking.com, into the business of restaurant reservations.
Restaurateurs are uncomfortable with a wave of mobile apps that secure and resell coveted tables at popular establishments, sometimes covertly.
The Amaya Gaming Group will acquire the Oldford Group for $4.9 billion and pave the way for the brands Full Tilt Poker and PokerStars to re-enter the United States market.
Nonprofit organizations’ events have become part of the season for affluent golfers and the wealthy trustees who organize them.
Only 25 percent of American teenagers were employed last summer, but the long-term payoffs from a summer job are hard to beat, according to a new study.
The British government intends to make it a crime to manipulate benchmark interest rates used in foreign exchange, fixed-income and commodities markets.
Ali Rowghani will stay on as an adviser, and Twitter said it did not intend to appoint anyone else to the position.
We know that Google, Facebook and other companies watch us online to figure out what next to sell us. Now a linguistic analysis tool can give us a feel of what we look like to them.
Amazon, embroiled in a standoff with a book publisher, is using the same hardball techniques with new movies from Warner Home Video.
The start-up that digitally links passengers and freelance drivers has expanded beyond the United States to cities including London, Paris and Berlin — all of them the sites of Wednesday’s protests.
The authorities are investigating loans based on collateral of metals at a Chinese port, with implications for Western banks and the Chinese credit market.
Wealthy entrepreneurs represent a potential gold mine for financial advisers.
Though some call the taxi app’s valuation of $18.2 billion “insane,” it’s worth doing the basic math and taking a closer look.
Most workers who earn the minimum wage are older than they used to be and more educated.
Hillshire Brands, the company that makes Jimmy Dean sausages and Ball Park hot dogs, is expected to declare Tyson Foods the victor of a bidding war, people briefed on the matter said on Sunday.
Shareholders of the media company are to vote Monday on whether to divide the roles of chief executive and chairman, now held by Reed Hastings.
Plans could compete based on the types of treatments they cover, which would give consumers a far clearer choice than they have now.
Merck will pay $24.50 in cash, or about $3.85 billion, for the biotechnology company in an effort to bolster its arsenal of potential drugs in the hotly competitive hepatitis C area.
What is known as inclusionary zoning lets developers build more housing units if they charge much lower rents for some of them.
Readers respond to “B-School, Disrupted” (June 1).
To persuade children to eat healthy food, new research suggests that giving no message at all trumps any other persuasion.
Executive compensation boards are now more independent and rewards are increasingly tied to results. But C.E.O. pay remains enormous.
Women have a much harder time becoming a chief executive and hold well under 10 percent of such jobs, but those who do earn the same as men.
Internet companies like Google and Facebook are working to keep governments and especially their spy agencies out of their servers after revelations from Edward J. Snowden that they had been invaded.
The hedge fund manager Mark Spitznagel wants to use his goats to promote urban renewal and farming, but the city has other ideas.