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The Motley Fool July 6, 2005 Rich Smith |
Dell Plays the Patriot Card The company whose name is nearly synonymous with Indian tech support now intends to double the size of its customer service center in ... Oklahoma City. It may be a coincidence, or it may not, that Dell made this announcement on the first business day after July 4.  |
The Motley Fool July 6, 2005 Tom Taulli |
Amdocs Gets Top Billing The software developer announced its $238 million purchase of the DST Innovis unit of DST Systems. The stock price of Amdocs subsequently increased $1.06 to $27.79.  |
The Motley Fool July 6, 2005 Rich Smith |
Sanyo Starts Making Sense Will restructuring plans help the company make dollars (and yen) as well? Investors, take note.  |
The Motley Fool July 6, 2005 Brian Gorman |
McDonald's New Duds The fast food company's plan to remake its uniforms is money well spent.  |
The Motley Fool July 6, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Will Google Bury Microsoft? Google keeps taking baby steps into Microsoft's turf. Microsoft doesn't appear threatened by Google's newest foray at the moment.  |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2005 Matt Barthel |
Reinventing the Branch Manager The do-it-all BOM -- the guy who would mentor a financial office's young bucks, auditing their tickets and their client interactions all while recruiting and tending his own book -- is becoming obsolete in today's compliance-happy environment.  |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2005 Kristen French |
Apres Purcell--Le Spinoff? Now that Morgan Stanley's CEO has given up, the future of the old Dean Witter organization is in question. Morgan Stanley remains under pressure to improve profitability and its stock price.  |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2005 Kristen French |
You're Calling It What!??? After several months of deliberations and input from all 18,000 of its employees, the soon-to-be-spun-off American Express Financial Advisors selected as its new name: Ameriprise.  |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2005 Kristen French |
Demotion or Promotion? When Merrill Lynch announced that it would replace James Gorman, head of the firm's brokerage group, with his boss, Robert McCann, tongues wagged: Was Gorman simply moved into a sinecure? Put out to pasture? Or was he moved into a real post with real responsibilities?  |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2005 Christopher O' Leary |
The Fund Family That Said No While in the past few years many funds sued by regulators have been quick to settle, American, the second-largest fund family in the U.S. with $650 billion in assets is fighting back.  |
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