Hints and tips:
...SNIB chair Willie Watt told the FT that it was not surprising that the bank had got off to a slow start given it has been focused on getting up and running in its early phases....
...Anchorage Digital Bank — which holds a bank charter from the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency — has designs on the market....
...The UK air traffic control failure that led to chaos for airlines and left thousands of passengers stranded over the August bank holiday weekend was caused by a flight plan message that computers could not...
...With the help of a bank loan, which they repaid over the year, they added two new, bigger huts with outside baths that have been much photographed on Instagram....
...When Donal Mullane flew from London to Italy over the long August bank holiday weekend it was meant to be a short city break in Florence....
...Moehringer, who has also written biographies of Andre Agassi, Nike co-founder Phil Knight and bank robber Willie Sutton....
...Willie Walsh, former head of British Airways “It is very frustrating when you see these knee jerk government responses to some of the challenges they face....
...Asked why he robbed banks, armed robber Willie Sutton replied: “That’s where the money is”. Amid soaring energy company profits, Hunt might pragmatically make the same point....
...If, as Willie Sutton reputedly said, bank robbers rob banks “because that is where the money is”, then it is little surprise that modern-day criminals are resorting to cyber attacks on financial institutions...
...He is now a freelance journalist When he was asked why he robbed banks, Willie Sutton reputedly replied: “That’s where the money is.”...
...A famous, but possibly apocryphal story is that Willie Sutton, an American career criminal of the 1930s, was asked by reporter Mitch Ohnstad why he robbed banks....
...Earlier this week, ISS criticised British Airways owner IAG’s decision to award outgoing chief executive Willie Walsh a bonus of more than £800,000....
...Willie Walsh, former head of British Airways, has returned to the airline industry with a blunt warning to Heathrow and other airports not to use the pandemic to jack up prices....
...D-ID’s advertising work includes animating US president Abraham Lincoln and prolific bank robber Willie Sutton....
...Job moves Willie Walsh has taken a new job at a Dublin-based travel technology group just weeks after leaving British Airways’ owner International Airlines Group....
...Organised by the Transparency Task Force, an online community group, the event attracted support from Anthony Stansfeld, police commissioner for Thames Valley — the force that prosecuted the HBOS Reading bank...
...British Airways owner IAG’s decision to award outgoing chief executive Willie Walsh a bonus of more than £800,000 was criticised on Tuesday by an influential shareholder advisory group....
...Willie Watt, 61, told the Financial Times that the Scottish National Investment Bank would make a “proper positive return”, filling gaps in the financing of infrastructure projects and small and medium-sized...
...The other big event this week is the European Central Bank meeting on Thursday....
...This included a bonus of £883,000 for IAG boss Willie Walsh. It is the second year in a row Ryanair has faced protests from shareholders....
...The enlarged group aims to compete with established private banks, and offer clients access to private equity, real estate and hedge funds, as well as capital preservation strategies....
...IBM, with more than 7,000 employees in the New York area, was doubling down on the city for the same reason that Willie Sutton reputedly explained why he robbed banks: because “that’s where the money is”...
...International Airlines Group’s new boss Luis Gallego has shaken up the group’s management a month after taking over from longstanding chief executive Willie Walsh....
...Job moves Former British Airways chief executive Willie Walsh is to become the next head of the International Air Transport Association. More here....
...This impression created lasting damage to the reputation of banks — and business more widely — after the financial crisis. Restructuring is inevitable....
International Edition