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BusinessWeek September 26, 2005 Ian Rowley |
Rebuilding Japan's Banks Prime Minister Koizumi's finance-sector overhaul is driving Japan's recovery. It has also kept him in power.  |
BusinessWeek September 26, 2005 Manjeet Kripalani |
Warning Flags For Investors In India India's stock market has been on a tear. But there's a potentially dangerous disconnect between the market in Bombay and the corridors of power in New Delhi.  |
BusinessWeek September 26, 2005 James Mehring |
Central Europe: What's Delaying The Euro Momentum in Central Europe to adopt the euro as soon as possible has diminished.  |
BusinessWeek September 26, 2005 |
A Wide-Open Window In Japan The massive rally in the Nikkei and a steady stream of robust economic data suggest Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi's moves to clean up the banking sector, turn off the public works spigot, and hand out Cabinet posts based on merit rather than connections are finally paying off.  |
The Motley Fool September 19, 2005 Philip Durell |
Hunting Wounded Elephants When industry stalwarts fall out of favor, take note -- you may just find a superior company on sale. Just ask the masters: Value works. Happy hunting.  |
Commercial Investment Real Estate Sep/Oct 2005 Andrew Stewart |
7 Real Estate Finance Myths Unveiled Discover the market factors that really are influencing today's real estate transactions.  |
Commercial Investment Real Estate Sep/Oct 2005 Scott Farb |
Exporting Capital As economies throughout the world continue to expand, the flood of real estate investment capital headed overseas has swelled to record levels. This unprecedented growth is expected to continue throughout the year and well into 2006.  |
InternetNews September 16, 2005 Chris Nerney |
Let's Not Build This Bubble Mega-mergers, tech IPOs and more are fueling talk of another stock bubble. Can it happen again?  |
InternetNews September 16, 2005 Paul Shread |
Technical Analysis: Stocks Turn Up While the indexes turned up on Friday, a big Federal Reserve meeting lies ahead.  |
The Motley Fool September 16, 2005 Seth Jayson |
Seeing Beyond Lost Jobs The freedom and necessity to adapt, even via unpleasant means, is one of the main reasons that our economy keeps steaming ahead while the folks in Europe watch their GDPs stagnate. Companies that can't adapt eventually go away for good. And those that can survive just limp along.  |
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