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BusinessWeek December 4, 2006 Stanley Reed |
Up Against The Wall In The City Why the London Stock Exchange may not be able to evade NASDAQ. |
The Motley Fool July 24, 2006 Alex Dumortier |
Nasdaq Presses On The upstart exchange bloats share count, but strengthens earnings and revenue. |
U.S. Banker April 2007 Karen Krebsbach |
The LSE's Curse of Being Courted London's premier stock exchange is struggling to steady itself after a recent spate of interruptions, including Nasdaq's bungled takeover attempt. But executives remain sanguine. |
BusinessWeek February 26, 2007 Weber & Goldstein |
NASDAQ: From Predator To Prey? After NASDAQ's failed LSE bid, those beaten shares may look cheap to investors - and rivals, too. |
The Motley Fool November 22, 2006 Joseph Khattab |
Exchange Stocks Still Smokin' A recap of some of the hottest stocks on the market. April 2005 -- NYSE upgrades... March 2006 -- Nasdaq raises the stakes... March 2006 -- AMEX joins the party... etc. |
The Motley Fool July 23, 2007 John Finneran |
Nasdaq: Battles and Courtships Battling Bob's excellent results. Nasdaq may be better at battle than courtship, and investors should love him for it. |
CFO September 1, 2002 Alix Nyberg |
Exchange Shopping European stock exchanges may be aggressively marketing to foreign firms. But U.S. companies need a good business reason to list overseas. |
CFO May 8, 2006 Rob Garver |
Super-Market Shopping Flush with cash and a mandate to go electronic, stock exchanges prepare to consolidate. |
The Motley Fool May 22, 2006 John Finneran |
The Specialist Gene Why does the Big Board need specialists to trade the likes of IBM and Verizon? Anti-evolutionists swear that specialists provide liquidity to small stocks. But the London Stock Exchange uses computers to trade its largest mid-cap and small-cap stocks. |
BusinessWeek May 22, 2006 Sasseen & Weber |
Taking Their Business Elsewhere Foreign companies are spurning U.S. exchanges. Regulation isn't the only reason. Foreign bourses have become so attractive to corporate chiefs that the NASDAQ and the NYSE, eager to compete, are trying to buy them. |
BusinessWeek November 27, 2006 David Henry |
London's Freewheeling Exchange So far this year, the London Stock Exchange, along with its aim market geared toward smaller companies, has lured dozens of initial public offerings away from the NYSE and NASDAQ, long the most sought-after stock markets in the world. |
BusinessWeek May 7, 2007 Weber & Goldstein |
What's Next, Mr. Greifeld? NASDAQ is humming. Robert Greifeld's contract was just extended. But Wall Street wants more. |