忙しいな。。。

あとでゆっくり読みたい記事のリンクだけ貼っておこう。

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

Piggy Bank to the World
The deluge of Chinese savings over coming years could cure a feared capital shortage, a study says. It's not the "fiscal storm" once foreseen


If you made a list of respected pessimistic economists, Laurence J. Kotlikoff of Boston University would be near the top. For years he has warned that an aging population and overspending on entitlements were going to send budget deficits and tax rates skyrocketing, driving up interest rates and creating a capital shortage for decades. In 2004, Kotlikoff wrote: "We are heading into one God-awful fiscal storm, the full dimensions of which are hard to fathom."

Business News & Financial News | Reuters

US CREDIT - Dana rallies on accounting restatement
Thu Oct 20, 2005 4:29 PM ET

By Karen Brettell

NEW YORK, Oct 20 (Reuters) - Credit spreads on Dana Corp. (DCN.N: Quote, Profile, Research) rallied this week after the auto supplier announced a smaller than feared restatement of its earnings, and said it will restructure. The credit may have further room to improve, once volatility on the name settles down, analysts said.

The auto and truck parts maker said on Thursday that it plans to shed three businesses and cut up to 5 percent of its salaried workers. The company also warned of a significant 2005 loss because of restructuring charges and a prior decision to write off U.S. deferred tax assets.

Dana said on Tuesday that it expects a restatement of certain items in 2004 and the first two quarters of 2005 will reduce net income for those periods from $25 million and $45 million after tax.


http://www.marketwatch.com/news/archivedStory.asp?archive=true&dist=ArchiveSplash&siteid=google&guid=%7B58B0D4AA%2DBE34%2D445C%2DA645%2DC675040707C4%7D&returnURL=%2Fnews%2Fstory%2Easp%3Fguid%3D%7B58B0D4AA%2DBE34%2D445C%2DA645%2DC675040707C4%7D%26siteid%3Dgoogle%26dist%3D%26archive%3Dtrue%26param%3Darchive%26garden%3D%26minisite%3D


Got ethics on the job?
One-third of workers witness unethical behavior: survey
By Andrea Coombes, MarketWatch
Last Update: 10:08 PM ET Oct. 19, 2005

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Cynics might say a lack of ethics has been the hallmark of corporate America in recent years. So would about a third of U.S. workers, according to a new survey conducted for Hudson, a global staffing firm.

Thirty-one percent of those surveyed said they've seen co-workers act unethically, according to the survey of 2,099 U.S. workers....








あとでゆっくり読みたい記事のリンクだけ貼っておこう。

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

Piggy Bank to the World
The deluge of Chinese savings over coming years could cure a feared capital shortage, a study says. It's not the "fiscal storm" once foreseen


If you made a list of respected pessimistic economists, Laurence J. Kotlikoff of Boston University would be near the top. For years he has warned that an aging population and overspending on entitlements were going to send budget deficits and tax rates skyrocketing, driving up interest rates and creating a capital shortage for decades. In 2004, Kotlikoff wrote: "We are heading into one God-awful fiscal storm, the full dimensions of which are hard to fathom."

Business News & Financial News | Reuters

US CREDIT - Dana rallies on accounting restatement
Thu Oct 20, 2005 4:29 PM ET

By Karen Brettell

NEW YORK, Oct 20 (Reuters) - Credit spreads on Dana Corp. (DCN.N: Quote, Profile, Research) rallied this week after the auto supplier announced a smaller than feared restatement of its earnings, and said it will restructure. The credit may have further room to improve, once volatility on the name settles down, analysts said.

The auto and truck parts maker said on Thursday that it plans to shed three businesses and cut up to 5 percent of its salaried workers. The company also warned of a significant 2005 loss because of restructuring charges and a prior decision to write off U.S. deferred tax assets.

Dana said on Tuesday that it expects a restatement of certain items in 2004 and the first two quarters of 2005 will reduce net income for those periods from $25 million and $45 million after tax.


http://www.marketwatch.com/news/archivedStory.asp?archive=true&dist=ArchiveSplash&siteid=google&guid=%7B58B0D4AA%2DBE34%2D445C%2DA645%2DC675040707C4%7D&returnURL=%2Fnews%2Fstory%2Easp%3Fguid%3D%7B58B0D4AA%2DBE34%2D445C%2DA645%2DC675040707C4%7D%26siteid%3Dgoogle%26dist%3D%26archive%3Dtrue%26param%3Darchive%26garden%3D%26minisite%3D


Got ethics on the job?
One-third of workers witness unethical behavior: survey
By Andrea Coombes, MarketWatch
Last Update: 10:08 PM ET Oct. 19, 2005

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Cynics might say a lack of ethics has been the hallmark of corporate America in recent years. So would about a third of U.S. workers, according to a new survey conducted for Hudson, a global staffing firm.

Thirty-one percent of those surveyed said they've seen co-workers act unethically, according to the survey of 2,099 U.S. workers....