Bloomberg News

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Credit Bureaus' Deal To Improve Accuracy 'Huge' For Consumers

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Buying homes, getting jobs and borrowing money will be easier after an agreement by the three biggest U.S. consumer credit reporting services with New York.

Billionaire Greek Ship Owners Surface As Home Economy Sinks

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The nation’s ship owners still dominate the industry decades after Aristotle Onassis and Stavros Niarchos ruled the waves, with the nation's merchant marine fleet valued at about $106 billion.

Understanding The Business School Obsession With Ice Hockey

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Ice hockey, an unpopular sport even among people who enjoy sports, is a veritable obsession at some elite business schools. Each year, hundreds of students at U.S...

Goldman Sachs Sued For Sex Discrimination By Analyst Over Pay

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Goldman Sachs Group Inc. was sued for sexual discrimination by a research analyst who said the bank and its managers deprived her of a promotion, pay and bonuses.

Record Flows Into Muni ETFs Persist Amid Warning ’15 Will Hurt

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Investors are pouring a record amount of money into ETFs that focus on municipal debt even as the consensus on Wall Street calls for higher interest rates in coming months.

Social Security On The Bestseller List? The New Over-50 Shades of Grey

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"Get What’s Yours" is far from a soft-porn escapist romp, but the how-to book on maximizing your Social Security payout has become an improbable bestseller.

Apple Will Join The Dow Jones Industrial Average

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Apple was added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average, ending a banishment that kept the world’s largest company out for years before a stock split made its shares palatable to the price-weighted...

Inside The Powerful Lobby Fighting For Your Right To Eat Pizza

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There is nothing quite like the pizza lobby, a rare coalition of competitors who have banded together to advocate for a specific dish.

JPMorgan Joins Goldman As Indexed Annuities Boom Lures Banks

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But the rising popularity of these vehicles caused one regulator to caution that some marketing materials may inflate investor expectations.

Recession-Scarred State Colleges In U.S. Take Cuts As Fees Soar

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In 48 U.S. states, government spending on each college student is still below where it was before the recession that ended almost six years ago. Now, at least seven governors propose cutting deeper.

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