Podcasts about dow jones newswires

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Best podcasts about dow jones newswires

Latest podcast episodes about dow jones newswires

WSJ What’s News
Trump Bars U.S. Travel for Citizens of 12 Countries

WSJ What’s News

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2025 14:09


A.M. Edition for June 5. President Trump is reinstating a controversial immigration policy from his first term, banning travel to the U.S. from a host of countries largely in the Middle East and North Africa. Plus, Dow Jones Newswires economics editor Paul Hannon discusses the tricky needle central bankers will need to thread as inflation concerns spike, even if that's not yet showing up in the data. And gamers worldwide scramble to get their hands on Nintendo's new Switch 2 console. Luke Vargas hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Rebooting Show
The Wall Street Journal's Emma Tucker on audience-first publishing

The Rebooting Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 48:43


Emma Tucker was named the editor-in-chief of The Wall Street Journal (and Dow Jones Newswires) in early 2023. She was brought in with a mandate to shake up the Journal in a media market that Emma describes as changed “beyond recognition.” The Journal itself has its own challenges: an aging subscriber base that's pushing 60, a stodgy internal culture and often convoluted editing process that's exacting yet hard to square in the current realities of publishing. Like other publishers (and companies), it also has a restive workforce. Emma and I discuss the changes she's instituted since joining, from the small bore like doing away with honorifics (RIP, messrs) and putting a cat on a front page to the more substantial changes in top personnel and overhauling the WSJ's DC bureau. Her moves even led to a New York piece that wondered, “Who is going to get Tucked next?” (Her deputy is apparently known as an “angel of death,” which is a catchy LinkedIn endorsement.) Some key takeaways from our conversation: Transitioning from a “print ethos.” Print still gives publications heft, and I suspect that will become more valuable in a world filled with synthetic content, much of it utter crap. But that role is more of being a “shop window,” Emma told me the Journal needs a “definitive move away from print” to serving digital audiences rather than seeing the newspaper as a central distribution channel. Adopting an audience-first mindset. It sounds obvious, but the challenge for many publishers is adopting audience-first strategies rather than trying to be all things to all people (and all algorithms). That was the main takeaway from a content review Emma commissioned soon after taking on the top role. Those exercises are usually preludes to organizational change. The main theme highlighted in the review: being an “audience-first publication for people that mean business.” Translation: more investigative pieces, less filler content, more “constructive journalism” that serves audience needs instead of winning Twitter/X. Engagement is the new uniques. The traffic era of publishing has ended. Nobody brags about their ComScore uniques anymore; engagement is the new North Star. That's particularly true in subscription models, which are natural outgrowths of audience-first strategies. With subscriptions, churn is the boogeyman. I found it telling Emma didn't cite traffic numbers but highlighted that the Journal had decreased churn by 6% in the past year. The Journal has a newsroom dashboard that measures KPIs like guest visits, conversion rates, female readership, and young readership.  Other topics we discussed: Why American journalists are prone to navel gazing Balancing the need to attract younger readers without alienating the old codgers How to prepare for the “seismic changes” of AI The need to focus on what makes you irreplaceable

Current Account with Clay Lowery
S1E64 - Trump - the Sequel? Analyzing Economic Policy in a Second Trump Term

Current Account with Clay Lowery

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2024 27:41


In this episode of Current Account, Clay looks at the economic impact of what a second Donald Trump presidential term may be. Joining Clay is Yuka Hayashi, a journalist specializing on trade and economic security matters with over three decades of experience, including stints at the Dow Jones Newswires and Wall Street Journal. Clay and Yuka discuss what Trump's main priorities are, the feasibility and impact of his highly discussed universal tariff policy, how a Trump return to office may impact trade relations, how personnel selection will influence policy and much more.

Ethical & Sustainable Investing News to Profit By!
Podcast: The Best ESG Stocks for Potential Gains

Ethical & Sustainable Investing News to Profit By!

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2023 25:55


The Best ESG Stocks for Potential Gains. Includes 2023 ranking of best ESG companies and best solar and renewable stocks. Transcript & Links, Episode 117, November 3, 2023 Hello, Ron Robins here. So, welcome to this podcast episode 117 titled “The Best ESG Stocks for Potential Gains.” It's presented by Investing for the Soul. Investingforthesoul.com is your site for vital global ethical and sustainable investing mentoring, news, commentary, information, and resources. And look at my newly revised website at investingforthesoul.com! Tell me what you think. Now, remember that you can find a full transcript, and links to content – including stock symbols and bonus material – on this episode's podcast page located at investingforthesoul.com/podcasts. Also, a reminder. I do not evaluate any of the stocks or funds mentioned in these podcasts, nor do I receive any compensation from anyone covered in these podcasts. Furthermore, I will reveal to you any personal investments I have in the investments mentioned herein. Additionally, quotes about individual companies are brief. Please go to this podcast's webpage for links to the actual articles for more company and stock information. Also, some companies might be covered more than once and there are also 3 article links below that time didn't allow me to review them here. ------------------------------------------------------------- 1) The Best ESG Stocks for Potential Gains I'm beginning with this article titled 13 Best ESG Stocks To Buy Now by Syed Ijaz seen on finance.yahoo.com. Here's some of what Mr. Ijaz has to say. “We selected 40 companies from the Vanguard ESG U.S. Stock ETF (ESGV) and iShares ESG Aware MSCI EAFE ETF (ESGD). We then picked the largest companies in terms of capitalization and then ranked them based on Insider Monkey's database of 910 hedge funds tracked at the end of Q2 this year… 13. JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 106 In 2022, JPMorgan Chase financed and facilitated about $197 billion in climate, community development and sustainable development projects and initiatives. 12. Adobe Inc. (NASDAQ:ADBE) Hedge Fund Holders: 109 The company has developed and implemented ESG initiatives over the years… The company thoroughly focuses on its diversity, equity and inclusion activities. 11. UnitedHealth Group Incorporated (NYSE:UNH) Hedge Fund Holders: 111 UnitedHealth Group is a part of the National Academy of Medicine's Action Collaborative on Decarbonizing the US Health Sector and expects to reach operational net-zero target by 2035. 10. Netflix, Inc. (NASDAQ:NFLX) Hedge Fund Holders: 114 In terms of ESG, the firm plans to halve its emissions by 2030. 9. Salesforce, Inc. (NYSE:CRM) Hedge Fund Holders: 122 In its fiscal 2023 ESG report, the California-based company said that it maintained net zero residual emissions and provided more than $82 million as grants and donations to partners and communities globally. 8. Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) Hedge Fund Holders: 135 By 2030, the technology giant expects to manufacture all products carbon neutral. 7. Mastercard Incorporated (NYSE:MA) Hedge Fund Holders: 139 It intends to reach net-zero emissions by 2040 and support its suppliers' decarbonizing strategies. 6. Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOG) Hedge Fund Holders: 152 Alphabet has planned to commit to net-zero emissions throughout all of its operations and value chain by 2030. 5. Visa Inc. (NYSE:V) Hedge Fund Holders: 171 Starting in 2020, Visa achieved carbon neutrality throughout its operations and transitioned to 100% renewable electricity. 4. NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) Hedge Fund Holders: 175 NVIDIA has set a target to achieve and maintain 100% renewable electricity across its operations and data centers by fiscal 2025. 3. Meta Platforms, Inc. (NASDAQ:META) Hedge Fund Holders: 225 In its 2023 sustainability report, Meta's Vice President of Data Center Strategy Rachel Peterson said that the firm is moving towards the goals of net zero emissions throughout the value chain and becoming water positive across its operations, anticipating to attain both of these benchmarks in 2030. 2. Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) Hedge Fund Holders: 278 The company intends to achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2040 and empower its operations with 100% renewable energy by 2025. 1. Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) Hedge Fund Holders: 300 By 2030, Satya Nadella-led Microsoft Corporation expects to be carbon negative and by 2050, it intends to eliminate its emissions.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- 2) The Best ESG Stocks for Potential Gains Next, we have this great ESG ranking. The article is titled IBD's 100 Best ESG Companies For 2023. It's by Adam Shell on investors.com. This is some of what Mr. Shell has to say. “Topping the list this year is Microsoft (MSFT). Applied Materials (AMAT) took second place. In third place is Woodward (WWD). Best ESG Companies Methodology To build the 2023 100 Best ESG Companies list, we started with each company's ESG sustainability score created by Dow Jones Newswires, an IBD affiliate. These scores capture a broad spectrum of information on the ESG profile of more than 6,000 global companies. On Aug. 24, IBD asked Dow Jones for an ESG-scored list of all the U.S.-traded companies it tracks, a total of 2,067. We then cut the list to 1,559 companies on Aug. 25 by removing nonpublic companies and companies with stock prices below $10 a share. We also removed any companies that lacked sufficient data to create an IBD Composite Rating. We further qualified the list by removing those companies that did not meet or beat the S&P 500 in the past five years. [From which] We selected the 100 with the highest IBD Composite Rating — all with scores of 81 or better.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- 3) The Best ESG Stocks for Potential Gains Now we have another similarly titled to the first article above. This article is titled 13 Best Solar Energy Stocks To Invest In Heading Into 2024. It's by Ramish Cheema and found at finance.yahoo.com. Here are some of the points Mr. Cheema made. “To compile our list of the best solar energy stocks to invest in, we used the top 20 stock picks of the Invesco Solar ETF (NYSE:TAN) that are traded on American stock exchanges and ranked them by the number of hedge funds that had bought the shares as of June 2023 using data from Insider Monkey's database of 910 hedge funds. 13. SunPower Corporation (NASDAQ:SPWR) Number of Hedge Fund Investors: 17 SunPower is an American solar company that sells household solar power devices in the U.S. and in Canada. 12. Atlantica Sustainable Infrastructure plc (NASDAQ:AY) Hedge Fund Investors: 18 Atlantica Sustainable Infrastructure is a global British energy company with a renewable energy division. 11. Altus Power, Inc. (NYSE:AMPS) Hedge Fund Investors: 19 Altus Power is a small utility company that operates solar power generation systems used by both private and industrial users. 10. Sunnova Energy International Inc. (NYSE:NOVA) Hedge Fund Investors: 19 Sunnova Energy International is an American company with more than a thousand megawatts of solar power generation capacity in its portfolio. 9. Maxeon Solar Technologies, Ltd. (NASDAQ:MAXN) Hedge Fund Investors: 20 Maxeon Solar Technologies is a Singaporean pure play solar power hardware firm that makes and sells solar panels. 8. Daqo New Energy Corp. (NYSE:DQ) Hedge Fund Investors: 22 Daqo New Energy is a Chinese semiconductor manufacturer that provides products to solar panel manufacturers. 7. Shoals Technologies Group, Inc. (NASDAQ:SHLS) Hedge Fund Investors: 24 Shoals Technologies is a solar hardware company that sells products used to charge batteries and monitor solar power generation systems. 6. Sunrun Inc. (NASDAQ:RUN) Hedge Fund Investors: 24 Sunrun. is a solar power hardware firm that sells solar panels and energy storage systems. 5. Clearway Energy, Inc. (NYSE:CWEN) Hedge Fund Investors: 29 The firm generates thousands of megawatts of electricity through renewable power plants which include solar facilities 4. Array Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ:ARRY) Hedge Fund Investors: 32 Array Technologies sells hardware products that enable solar panels to track the Sun's movements. 3. SolarEdge Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ:SEDG) Hedge Fund Investors: 43 SolarEdge Technologies is a backend solar power firm that sells inverters and other associated products. 2. Enphase Energy, Inc. (NASDAQ:ENPH) Hedge Fund Investors: 50 Enphase Energy is one of the largest solar companies in the U.S. It provides micro inverters, batteries, and other solar power products. 1. First Solar, Inc. (NASDAQ:FSLR) Hedge Fund Investors: 51 First Solar sells solar panels to industrial and other large scale users.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- 4) The Best ESG Stocks for Potential Gains Continuing on the energy theme is this next article titled 3 Alternative Energy Stocks to Buy Amid Rising Wind Turbine Cost. It's by Aparajita Dutta and on Nasdaq.com. Here's some of what Ms. Dutta has to say about her picks. “1. Constellation Energy Corporation (CEG) Based in Baltimore, MD, the company is the nation's largest producer of carbon-free energy and provides sustainable solutions to homes, businesses and public-sector customers… It currently carries a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy). 2. Crescent Energy Company (CRGY) Based in Fort Worth, TX, the company is an independent oil and natural gas company that acquires, explores, develops, exploits and produces crude oil and natural gas properties… It currently carries a Zacks Rank #2.  3. Enlight Renewable Energy (ENLT) Based in Tel Aviv, Israel, the company provides a renewable energy platform that develops, finances, constructs, owns and operates utility-sale renewable energy projects… It currently carries a Zacks Rank #2.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- 5) The Best ESG Stocks for Potential Gains Yes, yet another listing of 13 stocks. This one is titled 13 Best Alternative Energy Stocks To Buy Now. It's by Faiq Zafar and found on finance.yahoo.com. Her's part of what Mr. Zafar Has to say. “To compile our list of the 13 best alternative energy stocks to buy now, we first made a list of the 30 largest alternative energy companies in the world in terms of their market capitalization… The stocks have been ranked based on the number of hedge funds which hold stakes in them. 13. Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. (NYSE:BEP) Hedge Fund Holdings: 13 As of 2022, Brookfield Renewable Partners owns more than 200 hydroelectric plants, 150 wind farms, more than 600 solar facilities, and four storage facilities across the world. 12. Sunnova Energy International Inc. (NYSE:NOVA) Hedge Fund Holdings: 19 Sunnova Energy International is an American solar energy company which was founded in 2012. 11. Plug Power Inc. (NASDAQ:PLUG) Hedge Fund Holdings: 20 Plug Power is an American company which focuses on the production of hydrogen fuel cell systems which are geared to replace conventional batteries in electrical equipment and vehicles. 10. Daqo New Energy Corp. (NYSE:DQ) Hedge Fund Holdings: 22 Daqo New Energy is a Chinese alternative energy company which focuses on the manufacture of monocrystalline silicon and polysilicon, which is an essential in the production of solar photovoltaic cells. 9. Sunrun Inc. (NASDAQ:RUN) Hedge Fund Holdings: 24 Sunrun is an American company which manufactures photovoltaic systems and battery energy storage products, specifically for residential consumers. 8. Algonquin Power and Utilities Corp. (NYSE:AQN) Hedge Fund Holdings: 29 Algonquin Power and Utilities is a Canadian clean energy and regulated utility conglomerate with multiple assets across the North American continent. 7. SolarEdge Technologies Inc. (NASDAQ:SEDG) Hedge Fund Holdings: 43 SolarEdge Technologies is an Israeli company… the company was one of the first clean energy companies in the world to successfully commercialize power optimizers, small devices placed behind each solar panel to allow for module-level MPPT and panel-level monitoring. 6. Constellation Energy Corp (NASDAQ:CEG) Hedge Fund Holdings: 46 Constellation Energy. is an American energy company which focuses on the production of electric power, natural gas, and energy management services. 5. Enphase Energy Inc. (NASDAQ:ENPH) Hedge Fund Holdings: 50 Enphase Energy is an American energy technology company which produces and manufactures solar micro-inverters, battery energy storage, and EV charging stations. 4. First Solar Inc. (NASDAQ:FSLR) Hedge Fund Holdings: 51 First Solar is an American energy company which focuses on the manufacture of solar panels, and provides utility-scale PV power plants. 3. NextEra Energy Inc. (NYSE:NEE) Hedge Fund Holdings: 59 NextEra Energy is an American energy company. It is the largest electric utilities holding company in the world by overall market capitalization. As of 2022, more than 60% of NextEra's generating capacity was from clean energy sources. 2. General Electric Co. (NYSE:GE) Hedge Fund Holdings: 71 GE is an American multinational conglomerate which is spread across multiple divisions. 1. Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) Hedge Fund Holdings: 79 Tesla is an American multinational automotive and clean energy company which manufactures electric vehicles, stationary battery storage devices from home to grid-scale, solar panels, and other related products.” End quotes. ------------------------------------------------------------- Other Honorable Mentions – not in any order. 1) Title: White House Investment Bodes Well for This Clean Energy ETF on etftrends.com. By Ben Hernandez. 2) Title: Union Pacific a Top Socially Responsible Dividend Stock With 2.5% Yield (UNP) seen on nasdaq.com. By BNK Invest. 3) Title: Top 10: Renewable Energy Companies in the USA on Energy Magazine energydigital.com. By Charlie King. ------------------------------------------------------------- Ending Comment Well, these are my top news stories with their stock and fund tips -- for this podcast titled: “The Best ESG Stocks for Potential Gains.” Now, please be sure to click the like and subscribe buttons on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or wherever you download or listen to this podcast. That helps bring these podcasts to others like you. And please click the share buttons to share this podcast with your friends and family. Let's promote ethical and sustainable investing as a force for hope and prosperity in these very troubled times! Contact me if you have any questions. Thank you for listening. And, again, please look at my new totally revised website at investingforthesoul.com. Tell me what you think! Talk to you next on November 17th! Bye for now.   © 2023 Ron Robins, Investing for the Soul

The Long View
Michael Santoli: Decoding ‘an Indecisive Market'

The Long View

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2023 51:52


Our guest this week is Michael Santoli. This is Michael's second appearance on The Long View, his first coming in August 2021. Michael is senior markets commentator at CNBC, which he joined in 2015. Prior to that, Michael was a senior columnist at Yahoo Finance, where he wrote analysis and commentary on the market and economy. That followed a long stint at Barron's magazine, where Michael was a columnist and feature writer for 15 years. Michael began his career in the early 1990s as a reporter, covering the securities industry for Dow Jones Newswires. He earned his bachelor's degree from Wesleyan University.BackgroundBio“Michael Santoli: Navigating Through a Foggy Market Outlook,” The Long View podcast, Morningstar.com, Aug. 9, 2022.Bonds and Interest Rates“KKR's Henry McVey Makes the Case for Real Assets,” Squawk on the Street, cnbc.com, Sept. 14, 2023.“AI Hype Lifts Microsoft Shares at Alphabet's Expense. An Opportunity May Be Investing for Investors,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, Feb. 8, 2023.Economy and the Stock Market“Stocks Churn With the S&P 500 Sitting at the Same Level It Was Two Years Ago,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, Sept. 16, 2023.“The Stock Market Is Stuck in a Typical but Anxious Seasonal Pullback,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, Sept. 9, 2023.“Collective Embrace of Soft Landing Economic Scenario Extends 2023 Rally After Welcoming Drop in CPI,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, July 15, 2023.“Stock Market Heads Into the Second Half With Near 15% Total Return so far in 2023,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, June 24, 2023.“Is It a Bull or a Bear Market? Stocks Churning in Same Spot for Weeks Frustrates Investors,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, April 22, 2023.“Explaining the Relative Calm of the Stock Market as the Fed Hikes Rates Into a Mini Financial Panic,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, March 25, 2023.“Run on Silicon Valley Bank Injects Some Panic Into an Already Slumping Stock Market,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, March 11, 2023.“Resilient Stock Market Finds Support at Just the Right Time, Preserving Uptrend,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, March 4, 2023.“Who Is Right? Bulls and Bears Each Have Reliable Indicators Backing Them in This Confusing Market,” by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, Feb. 11, 2023.

CLIMB by VSC
Jonathan Shieber⁠ & Manuel Waenke: How FootPrint Coalition is Shaping a Sustainable Future Through Climate Investing & Storytelling | EP. 030

CLIMB by VSC

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 32:21


FootPrint Coalition invests in high-growth, sustainability-focused companies. They make charitable grants to non-profits that advance the adoption of environmental technology and entertain, inform, and mobilize the public with original and curated content. They are a coalition of investors, donors, and storytellers committed to scaling technologies to restore our planet. Jonathan Shieber is the chief editor and a venture partner at FootPrint Coalition. He previously worked as Climate Editor, Contributors Editor, and a Senior Editor and writer at TechCrunch. Before TC he was a reporter covering venture capital and private equity investment in the U.S. and China at Dow Jones & Co. with work published in Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal. Manuel Waenke, Director at FootPrint Coalition, is an experienced leader in the sustainability and climate tech industry. He previously served as the Head of Corporate Strategy & Development at an agriculture biotech startup. Starting his career at McKinsey in Austria, Manuel later moved to the US after earning his MBA at Stanford. His focus is on leading diligence and investment activities at FootPrint Coalition. About VSC Ventures: For 20 years, our award-winning ⁠PR agency VSC⁠ has worked with innovative startups on positioning, messaging, and awareness and we are bringing that same expertise to help climate startups with storytelling and narrative building. Last year, general partners Vijay Chattha and Jay Kapoor raised a $21M fund to co-invest in the most promising startups alongside leading climate funds. Through the conversations on our show CLIMB by VSC, we're excited to share what we're doing at VSC and VSC Ventures on climate innovation with companies like ⁠Ample⁠, ⁠Actual⁠, ⁠Sesame Solar⁠, ⁠Synop⁠, ⁠Vibrant Planet⁠, and ⁠Zume⁠ among many others.

Paracatu Rural - Jornal do agronegócio
COMMODITIES: CAFÉ passa dos 200 cents e MILHO continua oscilação.

Paracatu Rural - Jornal do agronegócio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 10:22


Os estoques de café verde nos Estados Unidos diminuíram 88.690 sacas de 60 kg em março, totalizando 6.016.272 sacas, de acordo com dados divulgados ontem (17) pela Associação de Café Verde (GCA, na sigla em inglês). Ao fim de fevereiro, o estoque somava 6.104.962 sacas, de acordo com a Dow Jones Newswires. Esse foi um dos fundamentos que fizeram com que as cotações do café avançassem consideravelmente nos últimos dias. O agente autônomo de investimentos, João Santella Neto, Joãozinho Grafista, analisa o mercado do café e traz informações importantes do milho nas bolsas internacionais.

Stocks for Beginners
Spencer Jakab from the Wall Street Journal | The Revolution That Wasn't

Stocks for Beginners

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2023 45:16


If you don't know who the sucker is at the poker table it's you. I was joined in this conversation by Wall Street Journal reporter Spencer Jakab. His latest book is “The Revolution That Wasn't: GameStop, Reddit and the Fleecing of Small Investors.” The frenzy in meme stocks in 2021 was perceived as a Robin Hood style raid on Wall Street. Reddit forums filled with young men holding "diamond hands" taking down the financial industry. The truth was far more nuanced. We also took a detour to look at insider trading by members of Congress.Spencer Jakab writes for and edits the Heard on the Street Column at The Wall Street Journal. He was Deputy Editor between 2015 and 2019 and wrote the Journal's daily investing column, Ahead of the Tape, for four years before that. Spencer spent four years at Britain's Financial Times writing the “Lex” and “On Wall Street” columns and got his start in financial journalism at Dow Jones Newswires where he was part of a SABEW-winning team covering energy markets. Spencer is the author of two books on the plight of individual investors, both published by the Portfolio imprint of Penguin Random House. “Heads I Win, Tails I Win: Why Smart Investors Fail and How To Tilt the Odds in Your Favor” (2016) and “The Revolution That Wasn't: GameStop, Reddit and the Fleecing of Small Investors.” His first career was in finance where he spent years as a top-rated emerging market stock analyst. He lives in New Jersey with his wife and three sons.Find out more at the blog post: https://www.stocksforbeginners.net/blog/jakabHere's a link to the book: The Revolution That Wasn't: Gamestop, Reddit, and the Fleecing of Small Investors by Spencer Jakab (goodreads.com)Portfolio tracker Sharesight tracks your trades, shows your true performance, and saves you time and money at tax time. Get 4 months free at https://www.sharesight.com/stocksforbeginnersDisclosure: The links provided are affiliate links. I will be paid a commission if you use this link to make a purchase. You will also usually receive a discount by using these links/coupon codes. I only recommend products and services that I use and trust myself or where I have interviewed and/or met the founders and have assured myself that they're offering something of value. Stocks for Beginners is for information and educational purposes only. It isn't financial advice, and you shouldn't buy or sell any investments based on what you've heard here. Any opinion or commentary is the view of the speaker only not Stocks for Beginners. This podcast doesn't replace professional advice regarding your personal financial needs, circumstances or current situation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Registered Investment Advisor Podcast
Ep 86: Planned Financial with Frank Fantozzi

Registered Investment Advisor Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 13:37


Frank Fantozzi founded Planned Financial Services in 1994 to make a difference in the lives of families, business owners, and community leaders. After experiencing events that impacted his own family as well as family friends, Frank committed himself to creating a financial and investment management firm intended to assist clients in pursuing financial freedom and independence so they could experience the life they desired through access to greater choice and direction. He began his career in 1987 with the international accounting firm Arthur Andersen, where he became a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) in 1988. Frank honed his tax and financial planning skills during his years in the organization's tax and wealth management division. He earned the AICPA's Personal Financial Specialist (PFS) designation and a Master of Science in Taxation (MST) from The University of Illinois. Frank is also an Accredited Investment Fiduciary® (AIF®). In 2015, he was named a top U.S. Retirement Plan Adviser by the Financial Times1. He is involved professionally with the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA), where he is active on its tax and financial planning subcommittees; in the International Association for Financial Planning (IAFP); the Institute for Divorce Financial Analysts (IDFA); Fi360; Entrepreneurs' Organization (EO); and the Entrepreneurs Master's Program. Frank is a sought after speaker on a variety of financial topics and has been broadcast on various radio and television outlets, including Fox Business News, CNBC, Wall Street Journal Radio, and Market Watch Morning Stock Talk. He has also been quoted and his opinions and advice published by the Associated Press, USA Today, Reuters, The New York Times, Dow Jones Newswires, and The Wall Street Journal, to name a few. Additionally, Frank is involved in a number of civic and community-based organizations, including: LifeAct®, where he is a board member as well as a member of its marketing and development committees; Business Volunteers Unlimited (BVU); the Northern Ohio Italian American Foundation (NOIA); and the Brecksville, Broadview Heights and Beverly Hills, CA Chambers of Commerce. Frank is an active business mentor for other business owners through Entrepreneurs Organization, and is involved in several civic initiatives to improve the surrounding community. Frank is also the founder, director, and a travel soccer coach for the Brecksville-Broadview Heights Soccer Organization, which he founded in 2006. He supports the Christian Children's Fund, the Wounded Warrior Project, Defy, and other organizations focused on helping children and veterans. Frank lives with his wife Paulette in Brecksville, Ohio, and has two daughters, Nicole and Natalie. Born and raised in Cleveland, Frank is proud of, involved in, and committed to his city and its surrounding communities.   Listen to this insightful RIA episode with Frank Fantozzi about why he founded Planned Financial Services. Here is what to expect on this week's show: - How having a holistic team is important for any financial planning. - Why the best way of acquiring new clients is through client referrals. - How it's important for financial planners to use language everyone understands. - Why financial advisors must differentiate their business and know who their competitors are. - How most typical advisors only offer 60% of what Planned Financial Services offers.   Connect with Frank: Links Mentioned: https://plannedfinancial.com/ Twitter https://twitter.com/plannedfinan Facebook https://www.facebook.com/PlannedFinancialServices LinkedIn linkedin.com/company/planned-financial-services   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Shares for Beginners
Spencer Jakab from the Wall Street Journal | The Revolution That Wasn't

Shares for Beginners

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2022 45:16


If you don't know who the sucker is at the poker table it's you. I was joined in this conversation by Wall Street Journal reporter Spencer Jakab. His latest book is “The Revolution That Wasn't: GameStop, Reddit and the Fleecing of Small Investors.” The frenzy in meme stocks in 2021 was perceived as a Robin Hood style raid on Wall Street. Reddit forums filled with young men holding "diamond hands" taking down the financial industry. The truth was far more nuanced. We also took a detour to look at insider trading by members of Congress.Spencer Jakab writes for and edits the Heard on the Street Column at The Wall Street Journal. He was Deputy Editor between 2015 and 2019 and wrote the Journal's daily investing column, Ahead of the Tape, for four years before that. Spencer spent four years at Britain's Financial Times writing the “Lex” and “On Wall Street” columns and got his start in financial journalism at Dow Jones Newswires where he was part of a SABEW-winning team covering energy markets.Spencer is the author of two books on the plight of individual investors, both published by the Portfolio imprint of Penguin Random House.“Heads I Win, Tails I Win: Why Smart Investors Fail and How To Tilt the Odds in Your Favor” (2016) and “The Revolution That Wasn't: GameStop, Reddit and the Fleecing of Small Investors.” His first career was in finance where he spent years as a top-rated emerging market stock analyst. He lives in New Jersey with his wife and three sons.Here's a link to the blog post and transcript: https://www.sharesforbeginners.com/blog/jakabHere's a link to the book: The Revolution That Wasn't: Gamestop, Reddit, and the Fleecing of Small Investors by Spencer Jakab (goodreads.com)Portfolio tracker Sharesight tracks your trades, shows your true performance, and saves you time and money at tax time. Get 4 months free at https://www.sharesight.com/sharesforbeginnersDisclosure: The links provided are affiliate links. I will be paid a commission if you use this link to make a purchase. You will also usually receive a discount by using these links/coupon codes. I only recommend products and services that I use and trust myself or where I have interviewed and/or met the founders and have assured myself that they're offering something of value. Shares for Beginners is for information and educational purposes only. It isn't financial advice, and you shouldn't buy or sell any investments based on what you've heard here. Any opinion or commentary is the view of the speaker only not Shares for Beginners. This podcast doesn't replace professional advice regarding your personal financial needs, circumstances or current situation Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Morgans AM
Tuesday, 30 August 2022: US equity markets logged back-to-back losses as investors continued to digest Federal Reserve Chief Jerome Powell

Morgans AM

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2022 4:38


US equity markets logged back-to-back losses as investors continued to digest Federal Reserve Chief Jerome Powell's address at the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium last Friday (26 August) in which he signalled the central bank would keep hiking rates to tame inflation - Dow fell -184-points or -0.57%, Dow Inc dropped -1.63%, pairing a earlier decline of as much as -3.5%, after analysts at KeyBanc Capital turned bearish on the chemicals and specialty materials company (cutting their recommendation to “underweight”), citing concerns that the “meaningful” exposure to commodities and Europe skews the risk-versus-reward profile to the downside. The bearish stance comes after Dow Jones Newswires reported last week that Dow told its customers that it would temporarily reduce polyethylene (PE) operating rates by 15%. The broader S&P500 -0.67%, with Information Technology (down -1.28%) the worst performing primary sector for a second straight session and leading nine of eleven primary sectors lower. Energy (up +1.54%) and Utilities (+0.25%) were the only primary sectors to advance. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co dropped -6.24% after the pharmaceutical company reported results from a mid-stage trial of its developing stroke treatment that failed to meet the main objective of the study. The S&P 500 and Dow both briefly flipped positive earlier in the overnight session, but failed to hold those gains as losses mounted heading into the closing bell. The Nasdaq lost -1.02%. Apple Inc (down -1.37%) is holding a launch event at its headquarters in Cupertino, California, next week (7 September) and is expected to announce new iPhone models (as it has every September since 2012). This year's event has the tagline “far out,” which could refer to features such as night-sky photography. Netflix Inc added +0.58% after Bloomberg reported that the streaming giant is considering pricing its ad-supported tier at between US$7-to-US$9 per month, with the service expected to be launched in the final quarter of the year in a handful of markets. The small capitalisation Russell 2000 lost -0.89%.

Morgans Financial Limited
Morgans AM: Tuesday, 30 August 2022

Morgans Financial Limited

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2022 4:37


US equity markets logged back-to-back losses as investors continued to digest Federal Reserve Chief Jerome Powell's address at the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium last Friday (26 August) in which he signalled the central bank would keep hiking rates to tame inflation - Dow fell -184-points or -0.57%, Dow Inc dropped -1.63%, pairing a earlier decline of as much as -3.5%, after analysts at KeyBanc Capital turned bearish on the chemicals and specialty materials company (cutting their recommendation to “underweight”), citing concerns that the “meaningful” exposure to commodities and Europe skews the risk-versus-reward profile to the downside. The bearish stance comes after Dow Jones Newswires reported last week that Dow told its customers that it would temporarily reduce polyethylene (PE) operating rates by 15%. The broader S&P500 -0.67%, with Information Technology (down -1.28%) the worst performing primary sector for a second straight session and leading nine of eleven primary sectors lower. Energy (up +1.54%) and Utilities (+0.25%) were the only primary sectors to advance. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co dropped -6.24% after the pharmaceutical company reported results from a mid-stage trial of its developing stroke treatment that failed to meet the main objective of the study. The S&P 500 and Dow both briefly flipped positive earlier in the overnight session, but failed to hold those gains as losses mounted heading into the closing bell. The Nasdaq lost -1.02%. Apple Inc (down -1.37%) is holding a launch event at its headquarters in Cupertino, California, next week (7 September) and is expected to announce new iPhone models (as it has every September since 2012). This year's event has the tagline “far out,” which could refer to features such as night-sky photography. Netflix Inc added +0.58% after Bloomberg reported that the streaming giant is considering pricing its ad-supported tier at between US$7-to-US$9 per month, with the service expected to be launched in the final quarter of the year in a handful of markets. The small capitalisation Russell 2000 lost -0.89%.

The Long View
Michael Santoli: Navigating Through a Foggy Market Outlook

The Long View

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2022 53:28


Our guest this week is Michael Santoli, who is senior markets commentator at CNBC, which he joined in 2015. Prior to that, he was a senior columnist at Yahoo Finance, where he wrote analysis and commentary on the market and economy. That followed a long stint at Barron's magazine, where Santoli was a columnist and feature writer for 15 years. Santoli began his career in the early 1990s as a reporter covering the securities industry for Dow Jones Newswires. He earned his bachelor's degree from Wesleyan University.BackgroundBioCorporate Earnings"Santoli: The S&P 500, Lifted by Earnings, Makes a Run at a Key Threshold and Tests Its Downtrend," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, July 19, 2022."Santoli: Earnings Beats Propel Some Major Bank Stocks, but They Still Have a lot to Prove," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, July 18, 2022."Santoli: The S&P 500 Nears a Level That Could Indicate Whether the Recent Rebound Is Sustainable," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, June 27, 2022."Santoli: Agreeable Economic Data and Earnings Releases Lift Stocks Into a Relief Rally," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, July 15, 2022.Inflation and Recession"Santoli: There's Little for the Market to Like in June's Hot Inflation Report," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, July 13, 2022."Santoli: Investors' Worries Migrate From Inflation Panic to Fears Over U.S. Growth Risk," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, June 22, 2022."Santoli: June's Jobs Reports Is Too Strong to Feed Recession Fears, but Key Inflation Data Looms," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, July 8, 2022."Santoli: Strengthening Case Against a Recession Pushing S&P 500 to Highest Levels Since Early June," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, Aug. 3, 2022.Risk and Rising RatesJeff deGraaf"Santoli: Investors Grapple With a Sense of Surrender After the Fed Raises Interest Rates," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, June 16, 2022."Santoli: Investors' Worries Around the Fed's Rate Hikes Have Found a New Focal Point—Risks to Growth," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, May 25, 2022.Housing, Stocks, and Tech"The Spring Setup for a Resilient Market That Got Past a Tough First Quarter Without Much Damage," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, April 2, 2022."The 2022 Stock Market Doesn't Have to Repeat—It Only Has to Rhyme," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, Aug. 6, 2022."Santoli: Low Expectations Lift Netflix Shares, but the Stock Remains in Growth Purgatory," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, July 20, 2022."After Another Big Weekly Loss, Assessing Whether Weekly Stocks Are Cheap and a Buying Opportunity Is Near," by Michael Santoli, cnbc.com, June 18, 2022."Santoli: As a Reckoning Unfolds in Tech, Could Megacap Growth Names Be Poised for a Bounce?" cnbc.com, May 11, 2022.

Stocks for Beginners
Spencer Jakab from the Wall Street Journal | The Revolution That Wasn't

Stocks for Beginners

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2022 45:16


If you don't know who the sucker is at the poker table it's you. I was joined in this conversation by Wall Street Journal reporter Spencer Jakab. His latest book is “The Revolution That Wasn't: GameStop, Reddit and the Fleecing of Small Investors.” The frenzy in meme stocks in 2021 was perceived as a Robin Hood style raid on Wall Street. Reddit forums filled with young men holding "diamond hands" taking down the financial industry. The truth was far more nuanced. We also took a detour to look at insider trading by members of Congress.Spencer Jakab writes for and edits the Heard on the Street Column at The Wall Street Journal. He was Deputy Editor between 2015 and 2019 and wrote the Journal's daily investing column, Ahead of the Tape, for four years before that. Spencer spent four years at Britain's Financial Times writing the “Lex” and “On Wall Street” columns and got his start in financial journalism at Dow Jones Newswires where he was part of a SABEW-winning team covering energy markets. Spencer is the author of two books on the plight of individual investors, both published by the Portfolio imprint of Penguin Random House. “Heads I Win, Tails I Win: Why Smart Investors Fail and How To Tilt the Odds in Your Favor” (2016) and “The Revolution That Wasn't: GameStop, Reddit and the Fleecing of Small Investors.” His first career was in finance where he spent years as a top-rated emerging market stock analyst. He lives in New Jersey with his wife and three sons.Find out more at the blog post: https://www.stocksforbeginners.net/blog/jakabHere's a link to the book: The Revolution That Wasn't: Gamestop, Reddit, and the Fleecing of Small Investors by Spencer Jakab (goodreads.com)Portfolio tracker Sharesight tracks your trades, shows your true performance, and saves you time and money at tax time. Get 4 months free at https://www.sharesight.com/stocksforbeginnersDisclosure: The links provided are affiliate links. I will be paid a commission if you use this link to make a purchase. You will also usually receive a discount by using these links/coupon codes. I only recommend products and services that I use and trust myself or where I have interviewed and/or met the founders and have assured myself that they're offering something of value. Stocks for Beginners is for information and educational purposes only. It isn't financial advice, and you shouldn't buy or sell any investments based on what you've heard here. Any opinion or commentary is the view of the speaker only not Stocks for Beginners. This podcast doesn't replace professional advice regarding your personal financial needs, circumstances or current situation. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Chills at Will Podcast
Episode 74 with Memoirist and Journalist and Dogged Pursuer of the Truth, Jean Guerrero, Author of Hatemonger: Stephen Miller, and Crux: A Cross-Border Memoir

The Chills at Will Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 86:56


Episode Notes and Links for Episode 74 with Jean Guerrero         In this episode, Pete speaks with award-winning journalist and author, Jean Guerrero. The two talk about her writing and life inspirations, her charismatic and intellectually-curious parents, her work on her incredible memoir, and writing an in-depth piece on white nationalist Stephen Miller. Jean Guerrero is an award-winning investigative journalist and author of Hatemonger: Stephen Miller, Donald Trump and the White Nationalist Agenda. Her first book, Crux: A Cross-Border Memoir, won a PEN Literary Award. Her writing is featured in The Best American Essays 2019. She is an Emmy-winning border reporter, contributing to NPR, the PBS NewsHour and more. Months before Trump's family separations captured national attention, her reporting on the practice was cited by members of Congress. She started her career at the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires as a foreign correspondent in Mexico and Central America, trekking through mountains with coffee smugglers, opium poppy producers and more. She was the 2019 “Journalist of the Year” (Society for Professional Journalists, San Diego) and one of the California Chicano News Media Association's most influential Latina journalists in the region.   Buy Crux: A Cross-Border Memoir   Buy  Hatemonger: Stephen Miller, Donald Trump, and the White Nationalist Agenda   Jean Guerrero's Personal Website   Jean Guerrero Interview with Terri Gross and NPR's Fresh Air   “Stephen Miller's Dystopian America” from March 2020 in the New York Times   At about 2:30, Jean discusses her childhood in San Diego, specifically her relationship with language, including how speaking Spanish was often maligned in political circles   At about 6:15, Jean and Pete connect Jean's seemingly disparate books and shout out former Chills at Will guest Gustavo Arellano's well-made LA Times' podcast on Prop 187   At about 6:50, Jean responds to Pete asking about how her father influenced her learning and writing   At about 10:30, Pete and Jean reflect on the loss of language and cultural connections due to restrictions against speaking foreign languages in schools, which leads to Jean quoting the great Reyna Grande's ideas on “subtractive bilingualism”   At about 12:20, Jean references a pivotal event in Maria Hinojosa's memoir that connects to a similar “crossroads” for Jean    At about 14:00, Jean details how she is a combination of both of her parents' philosophies and skills   At about 15:55, Pete asks Jean if she “saw herself” in what she read as a kid; Jean talks about how white male-centric literature has influenced her-she mentions the article she's currently writing that examines this “premium the culture places won white male perspectives”   At about 18:40, Jean discusses fantasy and sci-fi reading as a “refuge” and connecting with outcasts   At about 20:05, Pete connects the ideas expressed by Jean about books as refuge, as he discussed in a bonus episode of the podcast-an addendum to Episode 32   At about 21:15, Jean discusses the formative The Liars' Club by Mary Karr and The Devil's Highway by Luis Alberto Urrea, read in her teacher Steve Brown's class   At about 23:15, Pete and Jean hone in on the unforgettable scenes that depict deaths in the desert of those trying to enter the United States, as depicted in Urrea's book   At about 24:10, Jean further lists some writers and texts that have given her “chills at will,” including Isabel Allende's Paula   At about 27:10, Jean describes the structure/format of her book in relation to the Popul Vuh   At about 28:55, Jean describes the cultivation of her writing skills and interests that eventually led to her becoming a stellar journalist and writer, including great boosts from   At about 31:45, Jean talks about Hatemonger and its inspiration, particularly US' policies regarding the border and immigration     At about 35:35, Jean delves into Stephen Miller's need to exclude and exact revenge, as evidenced in her book, including the opening; this leads to her outlining his childhood and adolescent behavior and ideology    At about 40:50, Jean touches upon discussions with psychologists about Stephen Miller and why she didn't choose to include those interviews   At about 42:30, Jean discusses the special significance and obsession of 9/11 for Stephen Miller and the “refuge of white identity” that came with listening to and communicating with David Horowitz, Rush Limbaugh, Larry Elder, etc.   At about 44:40, Pete compares Tony Soprano to Stephen Miller (yes, you read correctly)   At about 46:30, Jean recounts the statistics about crimes committed by undocumented immigrants that belie the false premise that American Renaissance and Stephen Miller put forth about the immigrants being more prone to crime   At about 47:45, Pete asks Jean her thoughts on the “normalization” of Stephen Miller; Jean talks about him being covered as either an “aberration” without historical context, and/or not calling his views what they are-white racist, nationalist views   At about 52:30, Jean examines Stephen Miller as the logical extensión of Richard Spencer and similar people “mainstreaming” white supremacy through their dress and use of “dog whistles”   At about 56:35, Pete asks about who needs whom more-Stephen Miller or Donald Trump   At about 57:55, Pete wonders what questions Jean would have asked Stephen Miller if she had been able to interview him   At about 59:20, Jean and Pete discuss Stephen's family situation, in which his great-grandmother railed against forgetting the family's US' origins as refugees; this leads to a discussion of the vile Camp of the Saints that Stephen continues to push    At about 1:01:25, Jean describes the coldblooded phone call Stephen made as a kid to former friend Jason Islas   At about 1:03:20, Jean discusses Crux and its origins and challenges in terms of the quote “to ignore the truth is to deny oneself”; this leads to Jean describing the process and emotions associated with jumping into such personal subject matter, including hard, but necessary, work at Goucher College with mentor Suzannah Lessard   At about 1:06:25, Pete talks about Crux as, “in the best sense of the word, ‘unclassifiable' ”   At about 1:07:00, Pete and Jean discuss the moving scenes in which Jean's grandmother details traumas in her life   At about 1:09:10, Jean outlines self-discovery in connection to the origins and history of her family, as well as the power of writing the memoir and her gratitude to her teacher Steve Brown for inspiring her   At about 1:11:00, Pete details some masterful writing by Jean regarding existentialism and “nothingness” and the distinctive experiences of children (especially the girls) of divorced parents   At about 1:14:50, Pete notes the second-person usage of Part IV of the book, and Jean explains the rationale for the usage    At about 1:17:30, Jean gives the background and rationale for the title of her memoir   At about 1:19:43, Jean reads an excerpt from Crux, a second-person address to her father   At about 1:21:06, Jean reads an excerpt from Hatemonger   At about 1:22:55, Jean talks about her exciting work upcoming for The Los Angeles Times as a new columnist, including her desire to debunk misinformation, as she's seen how it has hurt her father so badly You can now subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, and leave me a five-star review. You can also ask for the podcast by name using Alexa, and find the pod on Stitcher, Spotify, and on Amazon Music. Follow me on IG, where I'm @chillsatwillpodcast, or on Twitter, where I'm @chillsatwillpo1. You can watch other episodes on YouTube-watch and subscribe to The Chills at Will Podcast Channel. This is a passion project of mine, a DIY operation, and I'd love for your help in promoting what I'm convinced is a unique and spirited look at an often-ignored art form. The intro song for The Chills at Will Podcast is “Wind Down” (Instrumental Version), and the other song played on this episode was “Hoops” (Instrumental)” by Matt Weidauer, and both songs are used through ArchesAudio.com. You can watch this episode and other episodes on I'm excited to share my next episode with Marcos Breton on Aug 28. Marcos writes for the Sacramento Bee, and is California Opinion Editor for McClatchy Newspapers.

Conversations at Basecamp
Career Advice from Samantha Saperstein, Managing Director and Head of Women on the Move at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Conversations at Basecamp

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2021 56:55


In Kahilla's Career Advice series, we're bringing you access to top executives and women leaders. Find out how they've risen to where they are today, and how you can apply their success routines to your own career and story. ******* About Samantha Samantha (Sam) Saperstein leads the firmwide Women on the Move initiative at JPMorgan Chase. In this role, Sam works on programs that are designed to make JPMorgan Chase the best bank for women-run businesses and women consumers, the best company for women to work at, and a strong partner for women in communities around the world. Sam collaborates with teams across the firm on planning and executing women's programs, and messaging our efforts inside and outside the firm. Prior to this role, Sam spent five years as Chief Marketing Officer of 
Chase Commercial Banking, where she led the marketing, communications, and client experience functions. This included traditional and digital marketing efforts, media relations, employee communications, market research, and client satisfaction initiatives. Earlier in her career, Sam was a strategy consultant in the New York office of McKinsey & Company, where she served retail and wholesale banking clients. She also worked in journalism and spent several years covering the U.S. Treasury market and macroeconomics for Dow Jones Newswires, 
The Wall Street Journal, and Barron's. Sam serves on the board of Safe Horizon, the nation's largest victims' services agency that supports victims of domestic violence, child abuse, human trafficking, and youth homelessness. She also leads the Marketing Committee of the board. Sam has a BA from Brown University and an MBA from The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. She resides in Westchester, NY, with her husband and three children.

Shared Lunch
Australian journalist Jessica Sier on the ASX and creating good investing habits.

Shared Lunch

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2021 37:09


This week on Lunch Money, Brooke Roberts (Sharesies' Co-Founder) and Alice Rountree (Sharesies' Financial Analyst) catch up with Australian-based financial journalist Jessica Sier to chat about all things Australian Securities Exchange (ASX). Jessica has spent time covering carmakers in Europe for Dow Jones Newswires and capital markets and technology for The Australian Financial Review. She tells us a little about the Australian commodity sector and provides some handy tips around building valuable investing habits.

MSUWMA Podcast
Downtown Josh Brown Q&A - S2 Ep.8

MSUWMA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2021 46:14


Taken from the inaugural Student Success Summit, Josh Brown was the keynote speaker for this event brought by the FPA of Michigan. He is the CEO of Ritholz Wealth Management and writes a popular blog called The Reformed Broker, as well as the host of The Compound Show Podcast. He is also the author of the books Backstage Wall Street and Clash of the Financial Pundits and was named one of the "40 under 40" top financial advisors by Investment News. He has also been featured or has written for Fortune, Forbes, the Wall Street Journal, MarketWatch, Dow Jones Newswires, Bloomberg, and many more. The Reformed Broker: https://thereformedbroker.com/ The Compound Show Podcast: https://thereformedbroker.com/podcast/ YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/thecompoundrwm Recommended books: https://www.amazon.com/Simple-Wealth-Inevitable-Financial-Advisor/dp/0966976312 https://www.amazon.com/Go-Giver-Expanded-Little-Powerful-Business/dp/1591848288 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshua-brown-96a5569b/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ReformedBroker WMA website: http://msuwma.com WMA YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCT-eaRPTd0R1WlrLkRBweuQ Contact: msuwma@gmail.com Song credits: Abstract Orchestra, Fancy Clown - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hYhN8is0Syg

The Chills at Will Podcast
Bonus Episode! Addendum to Episode 32, Using Jean Guerrero's Crux and Simon and Garfunkel's "I am a Rock"

The Chills at Will Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2021 6:58


This is a first-in rereading Jean Guerrero's incredible memoir, Crux, I found common themes and extended metaphor with Simon and Garfunkel's "I am a Rock," covered in Episode 32, and so I did a bonus episode! I look forward to doing a more in-depth discussion of Crux on a later episode.     Jean Guerrero is an award-winning investigative journalist and author of Hatemonger: Stephen Miller, Donald Trump and the White Nationalist Agenda. Her first book, Crux: A Cross-Border Memoir, won a PEN Literary Award. Her writing is featured in Vanity Fair, Politico, The Nation, Wired, the New York Times, The Washington Post, Best American Essays 2019 by Rebecca Solnit and more. She is an Emmy-winning border reporter, contributing to NPR, the PBS NewsHour and more. Months before Trump's family separations captured national attention, her reporting on the practice was cited by members of Congress. She started her career at the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires as a foreign correspondent in Mexico and Central America, trekking through mountains with coffee smugglers, opium poppy producers and more. She was 2019 “Journalist of the Year” (Society for Professional Journalists, San Diego) and one of the California Chicano News Media Association's most influential Latina journalists in the region.

The World According to Boyar
Michael Santoli, Senior Markets commentator at CNBC on how he has used his experience covering 9/11 and has applied that to Covid-19. He also discusses the importance of Twitter in journalism.

The World According to Boyar

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later Dec 9, 2020 33:43 Transcription Available


The Interview Discusses: Michael's fascinating career  from  being a columnist and feature writer at Barron's  to becoming a Senior Markets Commentator on CNBC. The importance of Twitter as a tool for journalists. Michael's famous source, ‘the mystery broker'. How Michael has used his experience covering 9/11 and has applied that to Covid-19.His thoughts on the possible rotation from growth to  value in the equity markets.Biography:Michael Santoli joined CNBC in October 2015 as a Senior Markets Commentator, based at the network's Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, N.J. Previously, Santoli was a Senior Columnist at Yahoo Finance, where he wrote analysis and commentary on the stock market, corporate news and the economy. He also appeared on Yahoo Finance video programs, where he offered insights on the most important business stories of the day, and was a regular contributor to CNBC and other networks.Santoli has covered the Wall Street beat for more than 20 years. Prior to joining Yahoo in 2012, he spent 15 years as a columnist and feature writer for Barron's magazine. From 1993 to 1997, Santoli was a reporter at Dow Jones Newswires, covering the securities industry, and was awarded two Dow Jones Newswire Awards for distinguished real time journalism.Santoli is a graduate of Wesleyan University and lives in New York City.

COVIDCalls
EP #170 - 11.16.2020 - The Digital Divide and the Pandemic

COVIDCalls

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2020 61:47


Today we have a discussion of the digital divide, the tech industry, and COVID-19 with Roger Cheng.Roger Cheng is the executive editor and head of CNET News, where he manages everything from daily breaking stories to larger investigative packages. Prior to this, he was on the telecommunications beat and wrote for Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal for nearly a decade.

The Chris Voss Show
The Chris Voss Show Podcast – Hatemonger: Stephen Miller, Donald Trump, and the White Nationalist Agenda by Jean Guerrero

The Chris Voss Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2020 56:37


Hatemonger: Stephen Miller, Donald Trump, and the White Nationalist Agenda by Jean Guerrero Jeanguerrero.com “A vital book for understanding the still-unfolding nightmare of nationalism and racism in the 21st century.” –Francisco Cantu, author of The Line Becomes a River Stephen Miller is one of the most influential advisors in the White House. He has crafted Donald Trump's speeches, designed immigration policies that ban Muslims and separate families, and outlasted such Trump stalwarts as Steve Bannon and Jeff Sessions. But he's remained an enigma. Until now. Emmy- and PEN-winning investigative journalist and author Jean Guerrero charts the thirty-four-year-old's astonishing rise to power, drawing from more than one hundred interviews with his family, friends, adversaries and government officials. Radicalized as a teenager, Miller relished provocation at his high school in liberal Santa Monica, California. He clashed with administrators and antagonized dark-skinned classmates with invectives against bilingualism and multiculturalism. At Duke University, he cloaked racist and classist ideas in the language of patriotism and heritage to get them airtime amid controversies. On Capitol Hill, he served Tea Party congresswoman Michele Bachmann and nativist Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions. Recruited to Trump's campaign, Miller met his idol. Having dreamed of Trump's presidency before he even announced his decision to run, Miller became his senior policy advisor and speechwriter. Together, they stoked dystopian fears about the Democrats, “Deep State” and “American Carnage,” painting migrants and their supporters as an existential threat to America. Through backroom machinations and sheer force of will, Miller survived dozens of resignations and encouraged Trump's harshest impulses, in conflict with the president's own family. While Trump railed against illegal immigration, Miller crusaded against legal immigration. He targeted refugees, asylum seekers and their children, engineering an ethical crisis for a nation that once saw itself as the conscience of the world. Miller rallied support for this agenda, even as federal judges tried to stop it, by courting the white rage that found violent expression in tragedies from El Paso to Charlottesville. Hatemonger unveils the man driving some of the most divisive confrontations over what it means to be American––and what America will become. Jean Guerrero is the PEN-winning author of CRUX and the forthcoming biography of Trump's senior advisor Stephen Miller, Hatemonger. Her writing is featured in The Best American Essays 2019. She is an Emmy-winning investigative reporter for KPBS, contributing to NPR and the PBS NewsHour. She started her career at the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires as a foreign correspondent in Mexico.

Brendan Carr Podcast
#19 Dinny McMahon: China's Debt Crisis in 2019

Brendan Carr Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2019 52:48


Get the book - https://amzn.to/2Xka1dg  In this episode, Brendan Carr and Dinny McMahon discuss the Chinese economy in 2019. Dinny McMahon is the author of China's Great Wall of Debt. He spent ten years as a financial journalist in China, including six years in Beijing at The Wall Street Journal, and four years with Dow Jones Newswires in Shanghai, where he also contributed to the Far Eastern Economic Review. In 2015, he left China and The Wall Street Journal to take up a fellowship at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, a think tank in Washington DC, where he wrote China's Great Wall of Debt. Dinny is an Australian who currently lives in Chicago, where he works at MacroPolo, a think tank focused on Chinese economic issues. Dinny's newsletter - https://www.dinnymcmahon.com/

Background Mode
TMO Background Mode Interview with CNET Journalist Shara Tibken

Background Mode

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2018 39:41


Shara Tibken is a senior reporter/journalist for CNET News, focused on Samsung and Apple. She previously wrote for Dow Jones Newswires and the Wall Street Journal. She grew up on a farm in Iowa, where her mother was a teacher, and Shara became an avid book reader. That led to a desire to be a writer, meet people and learn new things. We chatted about her progression from Simpson College to interning for a small newspaper in North Dakota to landing a job with Dow Jones Newswires/WSJ and finally CNET in 2012. We talked about her recent investigation of rural broadband issues in Iowa, which is terrific, as well as future 5G smartphones, Samsung’s development of foldable smartphones, Samsung mimicking Apple and more. Shara gets into interesting technical detail on all these topics.  

Decentralize This!
Ep 8 - Michael Casey - Data, Privacy, and Decentralization

Decentralize This!

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2018 50:28


Hosted by Enigma's Head of Growth Tor Bair, our eighth episode features Michael Casey. Michael Casey is a hugely influential voice in the blockchain and decentralization space, as a writer, educator, advisor, and many other roles. He spent over 18 years at the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires before joining the MIT Digital Currency Initiative, where he is now a senior advisor. He is the author of multiple books, including The Age of Cryptocurrency and his most recent book, The Truth Machine: The Blockchain and the Future of Everything. Michael also serves as chairman of the advisory board at CoinDesk, where he still writes a weekly column, and he's recently started a new company: Network Effects. Michael discusses with Tor how he first got interested in the blockchain and decentralization space, the potential impact of global regulation, how popular social platforms fail at decentralization and privacy, how journalists can better measure and communicate the value of decentralized technologies and projects, and, for at least a couple minutes, crowdsourced singing holograms. Enigma's new podcast "Decentralize This!" features guests from all over the decentralization space: developers, investors, entrepreneurs, researchers, writers, artists, people in government and enterprise - all individuals who care deeply about building a more decentralized and sustainable world. How can all these people with different perspectives collaborate to create and scale the technologies we need to shape a better future? ---- Relevant links: Michael's Twitter: https://twitter.com/mikejcasey Michael's columns: https://www.coindesk.com/author/mikejcasey/ Michael's books: https://www.amazon.com/Michael-J.-Casey/e/B001JRYOHI Enigma: www.enigma.co Enigma Blog: blog.enigma.co Enigma Twitter: www.twitter.com/enigmampc

Hidden Forces
Dinny McMahon | Debt, Dysfunction, and the End of the Chinese Miracle

Hidden Forces

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2018 61:18


In Episode 65 of Hidden Forces, Demetri Kofinas speaks with China expert Dinny McMahon, who spent ten years as a financial journalist in China, including six years in Beijing at The Wall Street Journal and four years with Dow Jones Newswires in Shanghai. Demetri and Dinny discuss how Chinese malinvestment, massive debt burdens, and a population that is aging faster than anywhere else in the world has created the conditions for the worst economic and political crisis in modern history. It has often been argued that the Chinese economic model may offer the best prototype for how humans should organize politically, in the 21st century. For Westerners, it’s difficult to appreciate the scope of China’s development, and this is because of the way in which the country allocates capital and generates credit.    Unlike western economies, which are built around liberal, democratic norms of free-market capitalism, China’s economy operates more like a one-billion person, multinational conglomerate. This model has allowed the Chinese economy to grow rapidly; it has done this by leveraging massive amounts of capital that it reinvests into real estate projects and spare industrial capacity, with the expectation of ever-increasing economic growth. This leverage can be witnessed, most clearly, in the rapid growth of the country’s private and public debt. Bank liabilities in China have grown at an astonishing rate over the last twenty-five years. From 2009 to 2011 alone, assets in China’s banking system have expanded by 77 percent - a total of 7.6 trillion dollars over just a three-year period. The impact of China’s loan growth can be seen in the sky rocking prices of Chinese real estate, the overcapacity of Chinese factories, and the pollution of China’s once pristine environment. Cognizant of these excesses, Chinese officials have been trying to reform the country, by reigning in investment and stemming corruption. But even the best efforts of Chinese authorities cannot fix the country’s broken demographics. China’s population is aging faster than anywhere else in the world. In 2015, the country had seven and a half working-age adults to support every senior citizen. In fifteen years, that ratio will drop to 4:1 and by 2050, there will be only two adults to support every man and woman in retirement.     It is the fear of Chinese officials that the country will grow old before it grows rich, falling victim to the so-called middle-income trap, mired in debt and saddled with decades of malinvestment, air pollution, idle factories, and broken promises. Producer & Host: Demetri Kofinas Editor & Engineer: Stylianos Nicolaou Join the conversation on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter at @hiddenforcespod

The Houston Midtown Chapter of The Society for Financial Awareness Presents MONEY MATTERS with Christopher Hensley
Money Matters Episode 176- Taking Financial Literacy Global W/ Arindam Nag

The Houston Midtown Chapter of The Society for Financial Awareness Presents MONEY MATTERS with Christopher Hensley

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2017 30:24


CentSai, an online financial wellness community, and RIKAI Labs, China's leading chatbot platform announced a partnership aimed at improving financial literacy in China. Under the terms of the partnership, RIKAI Labs will use CentSai's engaging educational content to enhance its award-winning financial literacy chatbot, called “FinBot.” CentSai's content is expected to launch in China in the fourth quarter of 2017. According to a 2015 Standard & Poor's report, 72 percent of Chinese adults lack basic financial knowledge. To address this, RIKAI Labs developed “FinBot,” a chatbot friend powered by artificial intelligence (AI). FinBot teaches basic financial concepts through friendly conversations with users incorporating multimedia and social elements to increase engagement. This creates a dialogue providing social, actionable and customized financial information to individuals. Users access FinBot through  WeChat, China's largest messaging app with 963 million users.* On today's show we talked with Co-Founder and CEO of CentSai, Arindam Nag.  Arindam started his career as a sports writer in his teens in Kolkata where he grew up. Once out of college (St Xavier's College), with a business degree, he joined The Economic Times in India, spending three years as an editor and a reporter. He joined Reuters news agency in Bombay in 1994 and the next 12 years he moved to New Delhi, London and then New York where he wrote on a variety of business and finance areas. In 2006 he joined the Dow Jones group in London, writing the Heard On the Street column for the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires. He subsequently moved to New York as a deputy managing editor, launching new products for investment bankers and consultants. After a brief stint of over year as head of content at consulting firm Greenwich Associates, Arindam started plotting his entrepreneurship track, researching on how finance and economics could be simplified for the common man. Months later, CentSai was born. Arindam holds an MBA from New York University's Stern School of Business, post-grad degrees in Applied Economics and Journalism, and is also a Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst. To learn more about Arindam visit: www.Centsai.com  To learn more about Houston Money Week visit: www.Houstonmoneyweek.org     http://www.cheatsheet.com/personal-finance/how-schools-can-improve-their-personal-finance-education.html/ Financial Advisor Magazine Articles: http://www.fa-mag.com/news/advisors-stay-the-course-amid-monday-s-market-drop-22864.html?section=3  http://www.fa-mag.com/news/on-it-s-80th-anniversaryadvisors-consider-social-security-s-impactfuture-22784.html?section=3 You can listen live by going to www.kpft.org and clicking on the HD3 tab. You can also listen to this episode and others by podcast at: http://directory.libsyn.com/shows/view/id/moneymatters or www.moneymatterspodcast.com #KPFTHOUSTON #HoustonMoneyWK #CentSai

Spunti di vista
I compiti a casa: un affare di famiglia?

Spunti di vista

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2015


In apertura parliamo di Stati Uniti. Il giorno dopo la morte di due giornalisti statunitensi, uccisi da un ex collega di lavoro in Virginia, desta scalpore la scelta presa dalla catena di supermercati WalMart: smettere di vendere armi in Usa. "Questa scelta è stata presa basandoci solo su quella che è la domanda dei clienti"- ha detto il portavoce di Walmart, Kory Lundberg. Il gruppo ha anche precisato che non si tratta di una decisione politica, e che è stata presa mesi fa a causa di un calo delle vendite di modelli particolari di armi. Intanto negli Stati Uniti si stima che ci siano in circolazione tra i 270 e i 310 milioni di armi. Numeri che potrebbero essere tra le motivazione di WalMart ad annunciare lo stop delle vendite di armi. Cifre impressionanti che hanno fatto affermare al presidente Obama che la violenza provocata dall'eccessiva diffusione delle armi provoca più vittime del terrorismo. I numeri e le pressioni degli azionisti di Walmart, che hanno fatto pressione sulla società affinché riconsiderasse la sua politica di vendita di alcuni prodotti (come quelli utilizzati in stragi di massa come quella alla scuola Sandy Hook di Newtown, in Connecticut, o nel cinema di Aurora, in Colorado), potrebbero essere tra le motivazioni della scelta del colosso WalMart. Ne parliamo con i nostri ospiti Pietro Barbanti, Primario dell'Unità per la Terapia e la Ricerca su Cefalee e Dolore dell'Istituto Scientifico San Raffaele Pisana di Roma, e Deborah Ball, responsabile per l'Italia di Dow Jones Newswires e Wall Street Journal.Wall Street Journal (New York). L'importanza dei compiti a casa è sempre stato un caposaldo della scuola italiana. Eppure c'è qualcuno che sta mettendo in discussione questo assioma. In questi giorni sta girando in rete un tweet di Luca Bizzarri, attore e comico italiano, che ha ripubblicato la lettera scritta un po' di tempo fa da Maurizio Parodi, genitore e dirigente scolastico, agli insegnanti di suo figlio. Nella lettera il genitore dichiara alla scuola che suo figlio non svolgerà i compiti assegnati per le vacanze ed enumera differenti ragioni. In primis sostiene il diritto del figlio a godersi le vacanze estive, così come fanno gli insegnanti durante la chiusura delle scuole. Sulla stessa linea d'onda sono gli originali compiti per le vacanze assegnati da Cesare Catà, insegnante al Liceo delle Scienze Umane "Don Bosco" di Fermo, ai suoi alunni: "Camminate da soli in riva al mare di mattino presto. Ballate. Siate allegri. Evitate le persone e le situazioni negative. Leggete un libro. Fate sport. Se trovate qualcuno che vi incanta, diteglielo. Fate i bravi". La lista continua e sta spopolando sui social network. Sembrerebbe che per molti genitori e studenti i compiti rappresentino una vera e propria fonte di stress e che la scuola rischi di diventare un incubo sia per i figli che per i genitori. Secondo l'ultimo rapporto dell'Ocse, infatti, gli studenti italiani trascorrono in media quasi 9 ore la settimana a fare i compiti contro una media Ocse di 4,9 ore. E molte volte, atterrati dalle valanghe di esercizi da svolgere o semplicemente preferendo altre attività nel tempo libero, chiedono aiuto ai genitori. Il problema è che i genitori non sempre si limitano ad un affiancamento, ma si sostituiscono completamente a loro negli sforzi, magari per proteggere i figli da un fallimento o per mantenere la pace in famiglia. E' giusto mettere in discussione l'importanza dei compiti a casa, e specialmente dei compiti da svolgere durante le vacanze? È giusto aiutare i figli a fare i compiti o è importante che lo studio del bambino debba restare autonomo, anche tornando a scuola con l'esercizio sbagliato? Lo chiediamo ai nostri ospiti: Francesca Borgonovi, analista della Direzione all'Istruzione dell'Ocse; Cesare Catà, insegnante al Liceo delle Scienze Umane "Don Bosco" di Fermo; Francesca Broccoli, psicologa e psicoterapeuta specializzata in relazioni rapporti genitori – figli.

Spunti di vista
Spunti di vista del giorno 28/08/2015: I compiti a casa: un affare di famiglia?

Spunti di vista

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2015


In apertura parliamo di Stati Uniti. Il giorno dopo la morte di due giornalisti statunitensi, uccisi da un ex collega di lavoro in Virginia, desta scalpore la scelta presa dalla catena di supermercati WalMart: smettere di vendere armi in Usa. "Questa scelta è stata presa basandoci solo su quella che è la domanda dei clienti"- ha detto il portavoce di Walmart, Kory Lundberg. Il gruppo ha anche precisato che non si tratta di una decisione politica, e che è stata presa mesi fa a causa di un calo delle vendite di modelli particolari di armi. Intanto negli Stati Uniti si stima che ci siano in circolazione tra i 270 e i 310 milioni di armi. Numeri che potrebbero essere tra le motivazione di WalMart ad annunciare lo stop delle vendite di armi. Cifre impressionanti che hanno fatto affermare al presidente Obama che la violenza provocata dall'eccessiva diffusione delle armi provoca più vittime del terrorismo. I numeri e le pressioni degli azionisti di Walmart, che hanno fatto pressione sulla società affinché riconsiderasse la sua politica di vendita di alcuni prodotti (come quelli utilizzati in stragi di massa come quella alla scuola Sandy Hook di Newtown, in Connecticut, o nel cinema di Aurora, in Colorado), potrebbero essere tra le motivazioni della scelta del colosso WalMart. Ne parliamo con i nostri ospiti Pietro Barbanti, Primario dell'Unità per la Terapia e la Ricerca su Cefalee e Dolore dell'Istituto Scientifico San Raffaele Pisana di Roma, e Deborah Ball, responsabile per l'Italia di Dow Jones Newswires e Wall Street Journal.Wall Street Journal (New York). L'importanza dei compiti a casa è sempre stato un caposaldo della scuola italiana. Eppure c'è qualcuno che sta mettendo in discussione questo assioma. In questi giorni sta girando in rete un tweet di Luca Bizzarri, attore e comico italiano, che ha ripubblicato la lettera scritta un po' di tempo fa da Maurizio Parodi, genitore e dirigente scolastico, agli insegnanti di suo figlio. Nella lettera il genitore dichiara alla scuola che suo figlio non svolgerà i compiti assegnati per le vacanze ed enumera differenti ragioni. In primis sostiene il diritto del figlio a godersi le vacanze estive, così come fanno gli insegnanti durante la chiusura delle scuole. Sulla stessa linea d'onda sono gli originali compiti per le vacanze assegnati da Cesare Catà, insegnante al Liceo delle Scienze Umane "Don Bosco" di Fermo, ai suoi alunni: "Camminate da soli in riva al mare di mattino presto. Ballate. Siate allegri. Evitate le persone e le situazioni negative. Leggete un libro. Fate sport. Se trovate qualcuno che vi incanta, diteglielo. Fate i bravi". La lista continua e sta spopolando sui social network. Sembrerebbe che per molti genitori e studenti i compiti rappresentino una vera e propria fonte di stress e che la scuola rischi di diventare un incubo sia per i figli che per i genitori. Secondo l'ultimo rapporto dell'Ocse, infatti, gli studenti italiani trascorrono in media quasi 9 ore la settimana a fare i compiti contro una media Ocse di 4,9 ore. E molte volte, atterrati dalle valanghe di esercizi da svolgere o semplicemente preferendo altre attività nel tempo libero, chiedono aiuto ai genitori. Il problema è che i genitori non sempre si limitano ad un affiancamento, ma si sostituiscono completamente a loro negli sforzi, magari per proteggere i figli da un fallimento o per mantenere la pace in famiglia. E' giusto mettere in discussione l'importanza dei compiti a casa, e specialmente dei compiti da svolgere durante le vacanze? È giusto aiutare i figli a fare i compiti o è importante che lo studio del bambino debba restare autonomo, anche tornando a scuola con l'esercizio sbagliato? Lo chiediamo ai nostri ospiti: Francesca Borgonovi, analista della Direzione all'Istruzione dell'Ocse; Cesare Catà, insegnante al Liceo delle Scienze Umane "Don Bosco" di Fermo; Francesca Broccoli, psicologa e psicoterapeuta specializzata in relazioni rapporti genitori – figli.

Baby Got Booked The Podcast
How To Get Booked On Entrepreneur Magazine

Baby Got Booked The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2015 40:17


Ray Hennessey is editorial director of Entrepreneur.com, and has worked as director of business news at the FOX Business Network, where he managed day-to-day editorial operations for the channel. Ray spent a decade at Dow Jones in a variety of positons, notably editor of SmartMoney.com and news editor for Dow Jones Newswires. He's been a columnist for The Wall Street Journal and appeared daily on CNBC television. He was also a regular on-air contributor to CBS News. And, he's a really cool guy! In this week's podcast, we get everything from fixing toilets (Ray is a former plumber!) to whether you can make a sales pitch in your Entrepreneur.com column. Entrepreneur magazine: is the leading title for stories on entrepreneurship and the entrepreneurial experience. They like to hear about people who are doing new things and innovating. The website has more than 15-16 million unique visitors each month. The definition of "entrepreneur" has evolved! It used to describe anyone who started their own business. Now, anyone who is innovating (even if they work within a larger company) are seen as using entrepreneurial principles. Think: disruptors. Innovators. People that are changing industries and companies. For Ray, the best part of Entrepreneur is: The audience! Smart, engaged, and active participants in the conversation. What sets Entrepreneur apart from Inc., Forbes, and other business magazines? It focuses not only on businesses and business owners, but also on their attitude, needs, and philosophy. It's about what drives people. It's less stuffy! Let's be honest: entrepreneurs are a bit nuts, but they are awesome. "We try to be as opinionated as our audience." -Ray Hennessey The biggest mistakes people make when pitching Entrepreneur: They don't build a relationship; Ray deletes most emails from names he doesn't recognize the name (Ray gets 1000s of emails a day) Pitching a story is like finding a job or a customer: it's about networking and building a relationship. This could be as simple as sending a LinkedIn request, sending a tweet, or sending a follow-up note after meeting at an event. Too often, people get in touch only when they need something--this does not bode well. Pro-tip: Get to know the magazine and show that you know what they do when you pitch. An expert is: Experienced! Track record is key! Someone who have new ideas Entrepreneur's stance on content marketing:  Content marketing is about educating the marketplace about where your product fits in. There are real benefits to content marketing, and Entrepreneur has benefitted as well. An example: a divorce lawyer talking about a new trend in custody. It is a subtler sell, and is a great way to generate leads More heavy-handed content marketing (Eat at Joe's! It is the only good restaurant) doesn't fly on Entrepreneur.com (and also isn't very effective). Customers can sniff it out, and bring the torches and pitchforks. What about putting a link to a product or a freebie at the end of an article? This is tricky for editors, especially when it comes to webinars etc. On a limited basis, Entrepreneur has let some authors promote events They would like to find a way to reward good contributors and benefit the audience. However, they are still collecting data, and keeping quality as the #1 priority. What does it take to become a regular Entrepreneur contributer? Every contributor must apply by contacting an editor They are evaluated Content is then monitored Pieces are then edited for both style and content--not all pieces make it to the audience Entrepreneur's stance on copyright and exclusivity: Entrepreneur owns all pieces Contributors are allowed to write for other publications (although this might change) An example of a pitch that got deleted immediately: Someone who started an email with "Dear Richard, I know you write frequently about the military" Robo-pitch or cut-and-paste pitches Pro-tip: Pitching is like asking someone out on a date. Find out what they are into before suggesting an activity. (Do your research. Personalize your pitch). Advice that Ray got to take him out baby pool and into the ocean: Stop thinking that you're smarter than everyone, because you're not. Go into everything with an open mind fills every day full of the joy of learning. How to pitch Entrepreneur magazine: here!

ABI Podcast
Episode 136 - Taking a Closer Look at the Impact of the Auto Industry on Detroits Chapter 9 Filing

ABI Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2015 20:33


Taking a Closer Look at the Impact of the Auto Industry on Detroits Chapter 9 Filing The latest ABI Podcast features ABI Executive Director Sam Gerdano speaking with Paul Ingrassia, Deputy Editor-in-Chief of Reuters News, about the Detroit's chapter 9 filing and the city's long-standing dependence on the auto industry. Ingrassia, who covered Detroit and the auto industry for more than a decade for the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires, discusses the auto industry aspect in Detroit's filing and more.

BUnconventional's Podcast
Business Unconventional - Episode #7, Segment #2

BUnconventional's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2011 13:59


In the second segment of this week's Business Unconventional business newsmagazine, hosts David Biondo and Dean Rotbart discuss how Colorado business compares with the rest of the nation.  The segment features Al Lewis, a columnist with Dow Jones Newswires and a veteran Denver-area business journalist. Lewis looks at the entire nation through a Colorado prism. B. Unconventional airs each Sunday morning at 8 a.m. (MST) on 710 KNUS in Denver.  It is also streamed over the Internet at www.710KNUS.com. 

business internet media entrepreneur news colorado journalism unconventional dow mst biondo al lewis knus rotbart dow jones newswires 710knus dean rotbart business unconventional david biondo
Cutting Through the Matrix with Alan Watt Podcast (.xml Format)
Dec. 30, 2008 Alan Watt "Cutting Through The Matrix" LIVE on RBN: "The Shot that Spluttered Around the World" *Title/Poem and Dialogue Copyrighted Alan Watt - Dec. 30, 2008 (Exempting Music, Literary Quotes, and Callers' Comments)

Cutting Through the Matrix with Alan Watt Podcast (.xml Format)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2008 46:48


--{ The Shot that Spluttered Around the World: "The Annual Flu's Here, Howl! Almighty Pain, Mixed Flu Shots from China, Neglecting ol' Brisbane, These Little Pricks with Needle Sticks, Scientific Fight, Say It's Free, Not for Me, the Mix is Never Right, Hype and Fear, the End is Near, Cognitive Dizziness, Mob Runs to be Saved, the Way is Paved with Gold For Vaccine Business" © Alan Watt }-- 9-11, Buildings Destroyed, Economic Bubble - Media, Journalism, No Law Requiring Telling Truth to Public - Propaganda, Paid Advertisements. Movie Industry, Disasters, Gaia's "Revenge" - Cures for Diseases - Pandemics - Flu Shot, Inoculations, Outbreaks, Epidemics, Pneumonia. Canadian Permafrost, Unearthing Live 1918 Flu Virus - Military-Industrial Complex - Influenza Strain Mutations, Gene Splicing - Depopulation, Eugenicists Debating. Hen Farming, Eggs Used in Vaccine Manufacture. Nascent Moon, Sanhedrin, Venus - Hammer and Sickle - Astronomy, Eclipses, Priesthood. Archives of Information, Study of Masses - Religions, Education, Literacy - Computer Interfacing, Virtual Reality, Brain Chip (No More You as Individual), Programming. Financial Bailout, Banks' Use of Taxpayers' Money, No Accountability - Looting Public. (Articles: ["Glaxo Prepares Work Force For Worst-Case Flu Scenario" by Peter Loftus of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES (borsaitaliana.it) - Dec. 23, 2008.] [" 'Killer' Australian flu strain set to spread across UK, experts warn" (dailymail.co.uk) - Dec. 29, 2008.] ["Researchers unlock secrets of 1918 flu pandemic" (reuters.com) - Dec. 29, 2008.] ["Influenza: Battling The Last Great Virus" [Unearthing a deadly mystery] (archives.cbc.ca) - Broadcast Date: March 21, 1997.] ["Where'd the bailout money go? Shhhh, it's a secret" The Associated Press (iht.com) - Dec. 22, 2008.]) *Title/Poem and Dialogue Copyrighted Alan Watt - Dec. 30, 2008 (Exempting Music, Literary Quotes, and Callers' Comments)

SAJA
Meet Anusha Shrivastava, new SAJA Secretary

SAJA

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2008 30:00


SAJA, the South Asian Journalists Assn, presents a series of interviews with its leadership. In this episode, meet Anusha Shrivastava, SAJA's new secretary and coordinator of its mentor program. She is a reporter at Dow Jones Newswires. She'll be interviewed by SAJA co-founder Sree Sreenivasan. Send questions in advance to saja@columbia.edu; recordings will be archived at SAJA.org

Knowledge@Wharton
Murdoch and Dow Jones: Is This Good News or Bad?

Knowledge@Wharton

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2007 22:32


In April Rupert Murdoch made a $5 billion offer to buy Dow Jones and Co. which publishes the Wall Street Journal and also owns Dow Jones Newswires and Marketwatch.com. The Bancroft family majority owners of Dow Jones initially rejected the offer but came back several weeks ago to say it would consider it along with offers from any other groups. Murdoch's move has dismayed some Journal staffers who worry that the paper's editorial quality and objectivity will suffer. Murdoch though seems to have more in mind for this acquisition than just getting control of the Journal. Knowledge at Wharton has asked Wharton management professor Larry Hrebiniak and Joseph Turow professor of communication at the Annenberg School for their thoughts on this possible deal. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Venture Voice
VV Show #29 – Shoba Purushothaman of The NewsMarket

Venture Voice

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2006


Shoba Purushothaman’s career has shifted dramatically since she started her first job as a business journalist in Malaysia. After spending several years working for the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires, she grew restless just covering how the world was changing.…

Venture Voice
VV Show #29 - Shoba Purushothaman of The NewsMarket

Venture Voice

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2006


Download the MP3. Shoba Purushothaman’s career has shifted dramatically since she started her first job as a business journalist in Malaysia. After spending several years working for the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires, she grew restless just covering how the world was changing. She wanted to influence it. Shoba co-founded a public relations consultancy that helped corporations ride the wave of change brought on by the rapid expansion of television news. She saw first hand how inefficient video distribution was, so in 2000 she sold her first business and started The NewsMarket to make video distribution simpler. Though she weathered some tough times in 2001, she’s managed to build the company to millions in revenue and recently closed on a $12 million venture round. Show notes:

Inspiration Rising
How to Talk to Your Parents About Their Finances - Cameron Huddleston

Inspiration Rising

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 1969 46:05


Cameron Huddleston is an award-winning journalist with more than 17 years of experience writing about personal finance. Before joining GOBankingRates, she was a contributing editor for Kiplinger.com and wrote the popular Kip Tips column, which was syndicated in Tribune newspapers nationwide. Her work has appeared on Yahoo!, MSN, AOL Daily Finance and other online and print publications. U.S. News & World Report named her one of the top personal finance experts to follow on Twitter, and AOL Daily Finance named her one of the top 20 personal finance influencers to follow on Twitter. She has appeared on “Fox & Friends,” MSNBC and CNN and has been a guest on ABC News Radio, Wall Street Journal Radio, NPR, WTOP in Washington, D.C., KGO in San Francisco and other personal finance radio shows nationwide. She has an MA in economic journalism from American University and BA in journalism and Russian studies from Washington & Lee University. Before becoming a personal finance journalist, she worked at daily newspapers and for Dow Jones Newswires, covering convertible securities and junk bonds. Her new book is entitled “Mom and Dad, We Need to Talk: How to Have Essential Conversations with Your Parents About Their Finances.”In This Episode, You Will Learn:Fears that adult children have about talking to parents about finances.How to work with siblings when broaching the subject.Practical tips on how to start the conversation.Connect with Cameron:Mom and Dad, We Need to Talk: How to Have Essential Conversations with Your Parents About Their FinancesCameronHuddleston.comGOBankingRatesFacebookInstagramTwitterYouTubeLinkedInDon’t Miss A Single Episode:Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, or Stitcher.Leave a quick review on any of the podcast apps to tell people what you think about the show.Take a screenshot of the podcast and post it on Instagram or Instagram Stories. Tag us @insporising. We’ll repost and give you a shoutout! Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/inspiration-rising/donations