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BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 Gail Edmondson |
How Parmalat Went Sour Here's the skinny on Europe's enormous financial scandal |
BusinessWeek January 26, 2004 Gail Edmondson |
The Milk Just Keeps On Spilling At Parmalat Evidence is emerging that many investment bankers in Italy, Germany, and London harbored doubts about Parmalat's numbers for years, suspicious of its superheated growth. Why did many big banks keep floating its debt? |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 Gail Edmondson |
Parmalat: A Corporate Version Of "Clean Hands"? Every day, Italian investigators unearth fresh, worrisome details about the $17.8 billion Parmalat bankruptcy, Europe's worst-ever financial fraud. Plenty of heads may roll, but now Italy must get serious about good governance |
The Motley Fool January 15, 2004 Bill Mann |
Parmalat's Tanzi Is "Depressed" You're in jail for stealing hundreds of millions of dollars. What do you do? Tell the judge you're sad. |
The Motley Fool August 10, 2004 Rich Duprey |
Parmalat on the Offense The bankrupt Italian food and dairy giant files lawsuits against bankers over collapse. |
BusinessWeek February 2, 2004 Gail Edmondson |
Italy Needs A Renaissance In Corporate And Market Regulation Will public outrage over Parmalat finally bring new rules with sharp teeth? |
The Motley Fool March 11, 2004 Rich Duprey |
Bankruptcy Spoils Parmalat USA The dairy producer is overshadowed by its Italian parent company's fraud. |
BusinessWeek February 2, 2004 John Rossant |
Italy's Coming Credit Crunch As a wave of corporate paper comes due, cash-strapped companies are in peril |
The Motley Fool July 19, 2004 Rich Duprey |
Parmalat Is Worth a Lot Like a turkey being carved up for Thanksgiving dinner, the assets of the giant Italian food and beverage conglomerate Parmalat Finanziaria are being sold off piece by piece, wing by thigh. |
BusinessWeek June 21, 2004 Edmondson & Kline |
Can Parmalat Be Saved? If creditors support Enrico Bondi's plan, the Italian milk company Parmalat could be out of bankruptcy by November, less than a year after the implosion that rocked financial markets around the world. |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 Joseph Weber |
Auditors Asleep At The Wheel. Sound Familiar? Parmalat's collapse seems like deja vu all over again. That's because two of the tainted parties are accounting firms: Grant Thornton and Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu. One red-faced party is Italy's government, whose effort to build safeguards didn't work. |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 |
The Rest of the Fallen Heads rolled over bungled launches, loose accounting, and soured deals. |