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BusinessWeek December 4, 2006 Stanley Reed |
Up Against The Wall In The City Why the London Stock Exchange may not be able to evade NASDAQ.  |
BusinessWeek February 26, 2007 Weber & Goldstein |
NASDAQ: From Predator To Prey? After NASDAQ's failed LSE bid, those beaten shares may look cheap to investors - and rivals, too.  |
BusinessWeek May 22, 2006 Sasseen & Weber |
Taking Their Business Elsewhere Foreign companies are spurning U.S. exchanges. Regulation isn't the only reason. Foreign bourses have become so attractive to corporate chiefs that the NASDAQ and the NYSE, eager to compete, are trying to buy them.  |
CFO May 8, 2006 Rob Garver |
Super-Market Shopping Flush with cash and a mandate to go electronic, stock exchanges prepare to consolidate.  |
BusinessWeek May 7, 2007 Weber & Goldstein |
What's Next, Mr. Greifeld? NASDAQ is humming. Robert Greifeld's contract was just extended. But Wall Street wants more.  |
U.S. Banker March 2007 Karen Krebsbach |
Is London Center of Financial World? Say it isn't so. With London proclaiming itself king of the financial universe, New York's financial gurus are asking: Should U.S. banks simplify and have only one regulator?  |
The Motley Fool July 13, 2006 Alex Dumortier |
Another Japanese-Korean Truce? The Tokyo Stock Exchange and Korea Exchange announcement of a collaboration agreement is one sign of a change exchanges industry.  |
BusinessWeek November 27, 2006 David Henry |
London's Freewheeling Exchange So far this year, the London Stock Exchange, along with its aim market geared toward smaller companies, has lured dozens of initial public offerings away from the NYSE and NASDAQ, long the most sought-after stock markets in the world.  |
The Motley Fool January 10, 2007 David Lee Smith |
A Cross-Pond Standoff The London Stock Exchange won't surrender to the Nasdaq quietly. The two trading entities have been jousting for nearly a year. All of this is playing out amid investors' demands for increased globalization in their trading opportunities.  |
BusinessWeek November 6, 2006 Maria Bartiromo |
Big Board, Big Challenges John A. Thain, who took the New York Stock Exchange public earlier this year, is racing to keep the Big Board competitive.  |
The Motley Fool November 22, 2006 Joseph Khattab |
Exchange Stocks Still Smokin' A recap of some of the hottest stocks on the market. April 2005 -- NYSE upgrades... March 2006 -- Nasdaq raises the stakes... March 2006 -- AMEX joins the party... etc.  |
The Motley Fool July 24, 2006 Alex Dumortier |
Nasdaq Presses On The upstart exchange bloats share count, but strengthens earnings and revenue.  |
CFO September 1, 2002 Alix Nyberg |
Exchange Shopping European stock exchanges may be aggressively marketing to foreign firms. But U.S. companies need a good business reason to list overseas.  |
BusinessWeek May 7, 2007 Stanley Reed |
Europe: The Making Of A Monolith ABN AMRO signals the euro zone's superpower status.  |
Wall Street & Technology October 20, 2006 Ivy Schmerken |
MiFID Rules Break the Exchange Monopoly on Trade Reporting Under new Pan-European legislation, which takes effect in November 2007, investment banks will be in a position to form their own trade reporting authorities and charge for disseminating their own market data.  |
Entrepreneur July 2006 David Worrell |
London Calling The London Stock Exchange is courting American entrepreneurs for its small-cap market. Are you a perfect match?  |
BusinessWeek July 2, 2007 Joseph Weber |
SarbOx Isn't Really Driving Stocks Away Despite the doomsayers, many foreign companies are rushing to list on U.S. exchanges.  |
BusinessWeek August 26, 2009 Mark Scott |
Europe's Bourses Are Losing Ground Fast European electronic upstarts are luring scads of stock trades away from the lumbering old exchanges.  |
BusinessWeek March 6, 2006 Joseph Weber |
From Dinosaur To Dynamo? Thanks to CEO John Thain's reforms, the NYSE's future suddenly looks promising.  |
The Motley Fool August 6, 2008 Morgan Housel |
Can Merrill Lynch Trust John Thain? He might not be consistent, but he's still a heck of a CEO.  |
The Motley Fool July 23, 2007 John Finneran |
Nasdaq: Battles and Courtships Battling Bob's excellent results. Nasdaq may be better at battle than courtship, and investors should love him for it.  |
The Motley Fool November 30, 2006 John Finneran |
Are Exchanges Overheated? Stock exchanges' stratospheric valuations may not reflect reality.  |
CFO October 1, 2008 Randy Myers |
The Champ Feels Some Heat Stock exchanges in Asia and Europe have made tremendous strides in raising equity capital for companies over the past three years. Is U.S. superiority at an end?  |
The Motley Fool April 21, 2008 Morgan Housel |
Merrill Lynch: Revenue Flops, Income Drops, Stock Pops It looks as though the slump will continue into next year.  |
BusinessWeek October 8, 2007 Stanley Reed |
Dubai: Wall Street In The Desert? Dubai's deal to buy into Swedish exchange OMX and NASDAQ furthers its ambitions to be the money center of the Middle East.  |
The Motley Fool December 8, 2008 Morgan Housel |
This Wall Street CEO Earned His Pay It's easy to boo Merrill Lynch CEO John Thain for his colossal payday, but if there's one Wall Street executive who actually deserves what he's asking for, it's him.  |
BusinessWeek November 26, 2007 Goldstein & Thornton |
He Fixed the NYSE. Can He Fix Merrill? John Thain won kudos for turning around the Big Board. Now he faces a bigger challenge cleaning up the subprime mess at Merrill Lynch.  |
Real Estate Portfolio May/Jun 2007 Sarfraz Thind |
Full Speed Ahead With a huge underlying property base, U.K. REITs are off to a fast start.  |
BusinessWeek September 12, 2005 Joseph Weber |
A Chinese Banquet For NASDAQ The NASDAQ is outpacing major rivals in lining up new listings of fast-growth Chinese companies.  |
U.S. Banker October 2007 Michael Sisk |
Peer to Peer They're not bankers, but their prowess in the financial services industry is legendary. Meet the other women who matter.  |
The Motley Fool September 15, 2008 Alex Dumortier |
B of A Marries Merrill, Leaves Lehman We went into the weekend thinking Bank of America might rescue Lehman Brothers. In a twist that demonstrates how fluid the current environment is, now Lehman is out, with B of A announcing it will acquire Merrill Lynch in an all-stock deal.  |
The Motley Fool June 30, 2008 Alex Dumortier |
Merrill Apes Goldman ... Again Merrill Lynch will create a senior executive role responsible for all European businesses in a move that mimics Goldman Sachs' hierarchy.  |
BusinessWeek March 6, 2006 |
The Big Man at the Big Board NYSE chief John Thain talks about going global, going public, going electronic, and bringing the exchange into the 21st century.  |