Who is signing your money?
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has been waiting to sign your money for seven months, and he'll have to wait just a bit longer.
View ArticleJosie Natori's stylish evolution
Josie Natori followed her business dreams from the Philippines to Wall Street. But after nine years as a banker, she needed a more creative outlet. In 1977 she launched a lingerie company with an...
View ArticleLawmakers grill SEC on Madoff
Senate lawmakers took the Securities and Exchange Commission to task Thursday for failing to prevent Bernard Madoff from perpetrating one of the largest financial frauds in U.S. history.
View ArticleBuffett praises BofA's Ken Lewis -- not!
Warren Buffett came to bury Ken Lewis, not to praise him.
View ArticleBofA CEO: $53 million retirement score
Ken Lewis doesn't have a golden parachute, but he's all set for a comfortable landing -- unlike his long-suffering shareholders.
View ArticleAmerica's most tone deaf CEO
Since being named AIG's chief executive in August, Robert Benmosche's brashness has unnerved board members and raised the ire of Congress.
View ArticleGM loses top executive
General Motors is losing its top U.S. sales executive, a key player in the automaker's reorganization, to a job in another industry, CEO Fritz Henderson announced Wednesday.
View ArticleA test case for Wall Street justice
Despite all the finger-pointing over who's to blame for the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, just two prominent players face criminal charges.
View ArticleBruce Wasserstein, Lazard CEO, dies at 61
Bruce Wasserstein, chief executive of asset management firm Lazard, died Wednesday. He was 61 years old.
View ArticleNo 2009 pay for BofA CEO Ken Lewis
In the past, Bank of America Chief Executive Officer Ken Lewis has received an annual salary of $1.5 million. But this year he will get nothing.
View ArticleWho cares if Wall Street 'talent' leaves?
There's no need to fear a Wall Street brain drain -- despite the crackdown on pay by Washington.
View ArticleMadoff accountant pleads guilty
The longtime accountant of convicted swindler Bernard Madoff pleaded guilty Tuesday to multiple fraud charges in connection to Madoff's notorious, decades-long Ponzi scheme.
View ArticleOprah to end talk show in 2011
Oprah Winfrey knows how to keep viewers on the edge of their seats.
View ArticleThe man who made people see profit in poverty
As a management writer for many years, I met more than my share of self-professed "gurus." They spanned the gamut from publicity-seeking quacks to deep-in-the-mud academics to -- occasionally -- truly...
View ArticleJohn Wooden's best coaching tip: Listen
Former UCLA Coach John Wooden passed away Friday June 4th. He is widely considered the greatest basketball coach of all time, and many believe he is the greatest coach of any sport. Wooden won ten...
View ArticleSkilling speaks: Enron CEO's jailhouse interview
When Jeff Skilling, the former Enron CEO, was convicted on 19 counts, the headline of the Houston Chronicle read "Guilty! Guilty!" Sentenced to 24-plus years in prison, Skilling had been a wealthy...
View ArticleJohnson & Johnson CEO Bill Weldon's painful year
What started last year as a series of small drug recalls at Johnson & Johnson exploded this summer into a full-blown crisis in quality control. But for months there was nary a peep from CEO Bill...
View Article"The Social Network" mystery: Where are the lawsuits?
If you believe what the folks at Facebook have been telling the press, there's a lot in the new movie, "The Social Network" that's just plain fiction -- especially about the company's co-creator and...
View ArticleRepublicans beware: Seeking blood usually leaves you bloody
In the fall of 1996, I sat inside weekly strategy meetings of conservative activists, as part of research for my book, Gang of Five, chronicling the rise of the baby-boomer right. The war-room host was...
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