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By Leslie Picker and Lu Wang, Bloomberg |
February 12, 2013
U.S. stocks advanced, sending benchmark indexes to five-year highs, as earnings topped estimates and investors awaited President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address.
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By Inyoung Hwang |
February 1, 2013
U.S. stocks rallied for a fifth week, with the Dow closing above 14000, on improvement in the labor market and better-than-expected earnings from key companies.
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By Brian Womack, Bloomberg |
January 31, 2013
Facebook Inc. reported a plunge in fourth-quarter profit on higher spending, even while it made long-awaited progress luring advertisers eager to reach mobile-device users.
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By Brian Womack, Bloomberg |
January 30, 2013
Facebook Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg is reaping benefits of a deeper push into mobile advertising at the social network he founded almost a decade ago.
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By Leslie Picker |
January 29, 2013
America’s second-largest equity market operator is merging its data and index businesses as part of a reorganization.
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By Michael P. Regan and Inyoung Hwang, Bloomberg |
December 31, 2012
Most U.S. stocks gained, rebounding from a five-day slump, as investors weighed prospects for a last-minute budget deal to avoid tax increases and spending cuts
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By Aaron Kirchfeld, Bloomberg |
December 27, 2012
SeaWorld Entertainment Inc., the operator of aquatic amusement parks owned by buyout firm Blackstone Group LP, filed for an initial public offering today.
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By Ari Levy and Douglas MacMillan, Bloomberg |
December 19, 2012
Facebook Inc., the world’s largest social-networking company, could be exposed to legal challenges surrounding its initial public offering similar to those faced by Morgan Stanley, according to legal experts.
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By Beth Jinks, Bloomberg |
December 19, 2012
A group including Apple Inc., Google Inc. and Research In Motion Ltd. agreed to buy patents from bankrupt Eastman Kodak Co. for about $525 million, gaining digital-imaging technology to capture and share pictures.
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By Michael J. Moore, Bloomberg |
December 17, 2012
Morgan Stanley, the lead bank on Facebook Inc.’s initial public offering, was fined $5 million by Massachusetts over claims the firm gave research analysts information that wasn’t provided to all investors in the sale.