The following 8-video Decade Rewind 2000s series is a pretty impressive display of creativity and execution from the WatchMojo.com team, a 2000s decade recap and review where we rewind the events of the past 10 years in the Auto industry, Business & Technology, Entertainment, Fashion, Music, Politics, Science & Space and Video Games. continue reading...
It’s ironic that real estate got banks into trouble, but the only thing that others really want from the f*cked financial companies is their real estate.
Not sure yet… but today might be bleak:
- Alan Greenspan: Economy in ‘once-in-a-century’ crisis continue reading...
As a long-time trader, I’ll admit: it’s impossible to time a high or low… but as an entrepreneur, I think it’s somewhat easy to bide your time and sell your company at the right time. But what about the chairman of a well-established, developed company?
Bear Stearns Cos. Chairman James Cayne on Thursday dumped his entire stake in the embattled investment bank for $61 million as it appears closer to a takeover by JPMorgan Chase & Co. continue reading...
This week, Jamie Dimon cemented his place in business lore. A lot of people who follow technology and media news might not recognize his name: Jamie Dimon is arguably one of America’s Top 10 most powerful businessmen. Time magazine put him in their Top 100, but this week, after buying Bear Stearns for $2/share, I cannot imagine how his power is not great enough to crack the Top 10.
According to this Wikipedia page: continue reading...
In 2006, I sat my wife down and told her: I was going to start a company, I would finance it myself until it made sense to raise outside funding or someone showed interest. She asked me a few questions, then I basically characterized the move as saying “instead of trusting CEOs and employees of companies I had nothing to do with and no impact on” I would be betting on myself, my ability to identify an opportunity, recruit a team, determine a business plan and build a company.
It was risky, but pointing to criminal cases like Worldcom, Enron, Arthur Andersen and not-criminal meltdowns like Yahoo! or flat stock prices like Microsoft, I thought it was a no-brainer. continue reading...