Fischer to Step Down in Mid-October as Fed Vacancies Mount
published Sep 6, 2017, 10:57:49 AM, by Christopher Condon and Craig Torres (Bloomberg) —Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer has resigned effective in mid-October, giving President Donald Trump scope to start reshaping the leadership of the U.S. central bank sooner than expected and clouding the longer-term outlook for monetary policy.
Your Social Security Number Now Looks Like a Time Bomb. It Is
published Sep 8, 2017, 11:21:43 AM, by Suzanne Woolley (Bloomberg) —One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them,One Ring to bring them all, and in the darkness bind them.—J.R.R. Tolkien David Haas doesn’t like to give out his Social Security number. He fends off all the requests
A World Apart: The Two Koreas and Six Decades of Separation
published Sep 10, 2017, 3:00:00 PM, by Jiyeun Lee and Hooyeon Kim (Bloomberg) —South Korea and North Korea could hardly be further apart right now: A new democratic president has been elected in Seoul after the peaceful ouster of his predecessor over a political scandal, while a dictator in Pyongyang has
What It Takes to Be Labeled a ‘Hate Group’: Megan McArdle
published Sep 7, 2017 1:22:19 PM, by Megan McArdle (Bloomberg View) — In 2010, the Southern Poverty Law Center designated the Family Research Council a “hate group” because of its orthodox position on homosexuality, and its occasionally incendiary defenses of that position. In 2012, Floyd Corkins showed up at the
SPORTS by Brad Weisman: Head Injury is REAL!
As a kid and teenager taking a jolt to the head meant nothing. You got back up and played the game. If you could see stars you were in fact excited and if you saw fireworks it was a treat. Perhaps there is nothing comical about seeing either. In fact,
Matt Levine’s Money Stuff: Indexers, Activists and Tax Robots
published Feb 2, 2017 8:20:51 AM, by Matt Levine (Bloomberg View) — Index funds and activists. The basic thesis of the index-funds-should-be-illegal crowd is that when most companies are mostly owned by the same overlapping group of owners — big mutual fund complexes, particularly passive index funds — then those companies
The Pentagon and the $25,000 Dog
published Aug 31, 2017 7:01:06 PM, by Lisa Fleisher (Bloomberg) — 1) The U.S. Military Needs More Good Dogs Highly trained dogs are in high demand by border patrol units, private security firms, the U.S. military and other agencies. They can cost $25,000 apiece—and that’s before additional training that can
U.S. Sanctions South Sudan Officials for Destabilizing Nation
published Sep 6, 2017 3:22:31 PM, by Sarah McGregor (Bloomberg) — The U.S. slapped sanctions on three current and former South Sudanese officials in President Salva Kiir’s government for their alleged roles in destabilizing the African nation and “enriching” themselves through corruption. The U.S. blacklisted South Sudan’s army deputy chief
How to Teach a Kid Thousands of Miles Away
published Sep 6, 2017 5:03:27 PM, by Peter Elstrom and Brad Stone (Bloomberg) — In China, parents are desperately seeking good teachers for their children. A number of local tech startups are meeting that demand; one is even connecting them with American tutors halfway across the world. This week, Bloomberg
Wal-Mart Brings Its Online Grocery Pickup to Amazon’s Backyard
published Sep 6, 2017 1:51:59 PM, by Matthew Boyle (Bloomberg) —Your move, Bezos. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. plans to open its 1,000th online grocery pickup location in a very strategic location: the Seattle area, hometown of rival Amazon.com Inc. The brick-and-mortar giant is letting customers in that area order food online