Tag Archives: BBY

Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News

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Senate says Apple used Irish subsidiaries to avoid taxes. A Senate report purports to show Apple (AAPL) used three Irish subsidiaries that have no tax residency in either Ireland or the U.S. to avoid paying taxes on some $74B in profits from 2009-2012. Although the practice was legal and is to a certain extent commonplace, the report says AAPL’s scheme was unprecedented in terms of both its complexity and its brashness in the “use of multiple affiliates that had no semblance of a physical presence.” The most glaring example is an Irish affiliate which reported profits of $30B over the period in question but paid no taxes whatsoever. Tim Cook will defend the company (which he says has done nothing wrong) before Congress today.

Cohen, SAC square off with prosecutors. A settlement between SAC Capital and the federal government regarding allegations of insider trading was likely


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Apple Should Rehire Ron Johnson For Its Own Good

By SaintsSense:

Two years ago Ron Johnson left a cozy job as the head of Apple’s (AAPL) retail stores to take on a renovation project at J.C. Penney (JCP). While Johnson’s hire was met with great optimism, the challenges facing J.C. Penney were just too much to overcome. With shares slumping to 52-week lows and mounting pressure from shareholders, J.C. Penney lost patience. Earlier this week, Johnson was canned.

More than recycled goods

Meanwhile, Apple had never filled his old post – the head of retail still has an opening. And Apple should give Johnson a call. Who is more qualified? Rocco Pendola of TheStreet disagrees – suggesting that if Apple hires back Johnson, he’ll buy a PC.

I get what Rocco is saying. Why would Apple want to recycle a "has-been" that couldn’t even cut it at J.C. Penney? However, it goes deeper than that. And at this point


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Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News

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Nikkei soars as BOJ launches blitzkrieg on deflation. The Nikkei (NKY) surged and the yen (FXY) plummeted after the Bank of Japan defied all expectations in its battle to end deflation. Following its first policy meeting under new Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, the BOJ will change its target when setting policy from the overnight call rate to the monetary base, which the bank aims to double within two years by purchasing ¥60-70T of assets a year. These include government bonds of all maturities and not just short-term debt. The plan is open-ended, and, significantly, was unanimously approved. The dollar was +2.6% vs the yen at the time of writing.

Eurozone service sector remains in the mire. Eurozone composite PMI dropped to 46.5 in March from 47.9 in February, with the services index slipping to 46.4 from 47.9. "The recession is deepening once again as businesses report


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