Hints and tips:
...It would also mark the largest deal of the year between two companies with a combined enterprise value of about $140bn, including debt, in what has otherwise been a tepid mergers and acquisitions environment...
...HomeServices is appealing that decision but said it believed the damages could be trebled under federal law to $5.4bn....
...This makes it all the more interesting that of these two notably similar companies, Uber is valued much more highly — its enterprise value is $85bn to Airbnb’s $59bn, a gap that has opened up only in the...
...A version of this article was first published by Nikkei Asia on July 19. ©2022 Nikkei Inc. All rights reserved....
...‘Perfect scenario’ Those look like V-shaped projections, Andrew Glenn thought to himself....
...In the news Apollo to merge with Athene Apollo Global Management is to merge with Athene Holding, the life insurance company it created at the height of the financial crisis, transforming the alternative...
...By last December, borrowings accounted for $17bn of the rental company’s $19bn enterprise value, with only a sliver of equity on top....
...Insurance Journal reports that the insurtech, which specialises in home insurance, has launched in the Netherlands....
...This reflects the fact that banks remain “the main source of liquidity insurance” for US companies, according to Sascha Steffen, a professor at the Frankfurt School of Finance, and Viral Acharya of NYU,...
...Covid-19 patients have been treated for free whether or not they hold health insurance....
...“I don’t really see any solution to the driver problem, unless the economy slows and the unemployment rate rises,” John Steele, chief financial officer of Werner Enterprises, a Denver-based carrier, told...
...By classifying drivers as independent contractors, Uber does not have to pay costs for benefits such as health insurance and sick leave that they must offer employees....
...Derek Leathers, chief executive of Omaha-based trucking company Werner Enterprises, told an investor conference last month that his company raised employee wages 15 per cent over two years, helping retain...
...PLDT’s contribution to recurring profit “will improve in 2018 and beyond”, according to the company’s guidance, and he expects revenue from data, broadband and home and enterprise businesses to grow....
...Finding another way to live up to its enterprise value requires a leap of faith that Tesla can attain and exploit an advantage in some other technology — batteries or autonomous cars perhaps....
...It covers some 40 per cent of the global economy and removes most, but not all tariffs and sets new rules for digital trade and the treatment of state-owned enterprises. Why has it stalled?...
...There were billions of dollars of losses for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation when Colonial went bust in 2009....
...Forwarded Hewlett Packard Enterprise is betting on a new approach to memory that it says can bring dramatic speed improvements to companies wrestling with growing troves of data....
...Other companies can sense that simplicity pays....
...The court’s decision today in Starr International Company, Inc. v. the United States recognizes that AIG’s shareholders are not entitled to compensation for that decision, and that the Federal Reserve’s...
..., “the conservator and the enterprises had not yet begun to discuss whether or when the enterprises would be able to recognise any value to their deferred tax assets” and so officials had not “envisioned...
...A bright spot came from privatisations of state-owned companies, as the triple offering of Japan Post’s bank, insurance and holding companies helped propel the Asia-Pacific region to a 43 per cent share...
...Insurance regulation is highly fragmented, with state insurance commissions traditionally supervising even large US insurers, rather than federal regulators such as the Federal Reserve....
...A month earlier, the Department of Justice sued Quicken, the biggest non-bank lender, claiming that it knowingly broke rules when making loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration....
...Hospitals and insurance companies are bracing for a shock should federal subsidies dry up. Though many of them initially opposed Obamacare, they are now flocking to help the government defend it....
International Edition