Strategy: Page 110
-
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Dream Factory
Anyone working in the Indian film industry probably knows a GaneshGaitonde. The antihero of Sacred Games, the new bestseller fromnovelist Vikram Chandra, is the head of the Mumbai mafia whosefondness for Hindi movies gets him into film financing with strings attached.Eventually, Gaitonde arm-twis...
By Abe De Ramos • March 28, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Six Stigma?
When Robert Nardelli was ousted as CEO of Home Depot, one unusual side effect was the attention paid to his advocacy of the Six Sigma process-improvement methodology. Consultancies, particularly those with competing approaches, were quick to offer opinions, surveys, and research intended to show ...
By Laura DeMars • March 28, 2007 -
Explore the Trendline➔
Getty Images
TrendlineTax policy shifts: What CFOs need to know to stay ahead
Discover how evolving tax policies are creating new opportunities and challenges for CFOs.
By CFO.com staff -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
John Noble, Best Buy International
Relaxed is the corporate mode of Best Buy, the U.S. electronics retail giant withU.S.$11 billion in sales and 940 stores in North America. John Noble is no exception. Dressed in a yellowturtleneck sweater, jeans, and sneakers, the CFO of Best Buy’s new international division exudes astately calm ...
By Tom Leander • March 22, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Manager, Offshore Thyself
Ask fans at the cricket World Cup, which starts in the West Indies on March 11th, where Wisden Group, the sport’s best-known publisher, is headquartered and most would guess London. Its heritage and brand are quintessentially English. Britain is still its biggest source of earnings. But its futur...
By Economist Staff • March 8, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Return of the Phantom
Given its long and illustrious history, you would expect visiting the headquarters of Rolls-Royce Motor Cars in the English countryside to be like stepping into a museum. But there’s only one classic model on display at the building, a 1928 Phantom I Sedanca de Ville, originally supplied to the D...
By Jason Karaian • March 5, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
On or Off?
What exactly is an offshore financial centre? At its broadest, it is any financial centre that takes in a large chunk of foreign funds — in other words, almost every financial capital in the world. Much of the business conducted in places such as New York, London or Hong Kong is from outside Amer...
By Joanne Ramos • March 1, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Beware the Fine Print
The web version of this article has been expanded to include the sidebar “Second Time Around,” which did not appear in the March print edition of CFO magazine.At a family gathering this past Thanksgiving, the head of the household suddenly announced that he was planning to invest in a variable an...
By Marie Leone • March 1, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Moving Pieces
It was as if America had swallowed Sweden. Since George Bush signed into law a one-off tax amnesty in 2004 that slashed corporate-tax rates from 35 percent to just over 5 percent, American companies have repatriated close to $350 billion in previously untaxed foreign profits, according to estimat...
By Joanne Ramos • Feb. 27, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
What It Takes to Succeed
The Jersey cow, a small, honey-brown bovine that is prized by farmers for the abundance of buttery, high-fat milk it produces, is one of the fastest-growing breeds in the world. From its origins in Jersey, a rocky island 14 miles (22km) off of the western coast of France, it now wanders fields in...
By Joanne Ramos • Feb. 23, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Places in the Sun
If the deal over North Korea’s nuclear-weapons programme holds, Kim Jong Il may be able to indulge his penchant for fine wines and Hollywood blockbusters again. Banks around the world had severed ties with North Korea after America last September blacklisted a Macau bank accused of doing business...
By Joanne Ramos • Feb. 23, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Kerry Eyes Fed Pool for Sickest Workers
With an eye towards making it more attractive for small businesses to provide health insurance benefits, Sen. John Kerry plans to introduce a bill to create a federal reinsurance pool to help employers pay for the care of seriously ill employees.Under Kerry’s proposal, which he touted during his ...
By Sarah Johnson • Feb. 14, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
WPP 2.0
If Nick Grouf wanted to impress his new financial backers, he probably outdid himself. At a meeting late last year with top executives from WPP, the global marketing services titan that had taken a stake in Grouf ‘s Los Angeles-based startup ad agency, Spot Runner, the young entrepreneur wanted t...
By Janet Kersnar • Feb. 12, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Should It Be Harder to Buy American?
Members of the House Financial Services Committee have reintroduced a bill that would tighten the process that foreign companies must undergo when planning to acquire a U.S. company. The committee plans to consider amendments next week, one year after the Bush Administration was criticized for al...
By Sarah Johnson • Feb. 7, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Executive Comp Splits Minimum Wage Camps
Since the 110th session Congress began with the Democrats in charge, legislators’ push to raise the minimum wage has been moving quickly. But the Senate’s insistence that the $2.10 wage hike be bundled with tax credits for small businesses could slow progress toward the increase.That’s because th...
By Sarah Johnson • Feb. 6, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Super Bowl ROI
Place your bets on the Super Bowl outcome now: Will post-game chatter center around Peyton Manning’s arm and the Chicago Bears’ defense? Or will office water-coolers be abuzz about who’s a better advertising pitchman—beer-stealing crabs or Britney Spears’ ex-husband? It may be too early to tell w...
By Sarah Johnson • Feb. 1, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
The Other Facts of Life
Jim McConnell had a dilemma: He wanted to share his wealth with his children, but he didn’t want the money to lead them astray or sap their will to succeed on their own.He’s far from alone. Currently, about 2.7 million Americans have at least $1 million in financial assets, according to the World...
By Chuck Jaffe • Feb. 1, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Water for Profit
When most CFOs think about liquidity, they’re calculating how fast they can turn assets into cash. But Aqua America finance chief David Smeltzer is just as likely to be concerned about how smoothly water is flowing through the 10,000 miles of pipes his company owns. As the largest among a handful...
By Alix Stuart • Feb. 1, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
View from Europe: Global Warming’s Cost
Gordon Boyd doesn’t see eye to eye with a lot of other CFOs. That’s because the finance chief of Drax, a UK power generator, is a fan of the European Union’s Emission Trading Scheme (ETS). The two-year-old mandatory program aims to mitigate global warming as cheaply as possible by imposing strict...
By Janet Kersnar • Feb. 1, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Planning for the Best
Does your finance organization focus on budgeting and planning, or cost management? While the two are not mutually exclusive — the best firms focus on both — emphasizing one over the other could have a dramatic impact on the overall effectiveness of the function.A new study by the American Produc...
By Joseph McCafferty • Feb. 1, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
The Great Unbundling
Globalisation is a big word but an old idea, most economists will say, with a jaded air. The phenomenon has kept the profession’s number-crunchers busy, counting the spoils and how they are divided. But it has left the blackboard theorists with relatively little to do. They are confident their tr...
By Economist Staff • Jan. 31, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Travel Expenses, Down to Earth
For Matthew Hackett, “power traveler” is hardly a glamourous label. A Waltham, Massachusetts-based business designer with the Global Consulting Oracle Practice of Computer Science Corp. (CSC), he spends 80 to 90 percent of his working hours on the road.“I’ve been caught in situations where I’m no...
By Esther Shein • Jan. 29, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Links Still Missing
Scorecard systems that help track performance have been around for years. So why do companies still use them incorrectly?A new survey sponsored by a group of 10 organizations and associations confirms what might seem intuitive: scorecards are not static instruments. It all comes down to whether o...
By Laura DeMars • Jan. 29, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Without Tax Relief, Wage Hike Stalls
Efforts to increase the minimum wage stalled in the Senate on Wednesday, as Republicans renewed attempts to tie the increase to tax credits for smaller businesses.The “clean” version of the bill, already passed by the House of Representatives, has just one goal: to raise the minimum hourly wage f...
By Sarah Johnson • Jan. 24, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Paying for College, Again and Again
This article is part of an expanded web version of “Tuition Magicians”, which appears in the January edition of CFO magazine.With the cost of a college education soaring, more grandparents are volunteering to help pay for their grandchildren’s college tuitions. In fact, a widely-referenced survey...
By Marie Leone • Jan. 16, 2007 -
Morillo, Christina. "Two Women Having a Meeting Inside Glass-panel Office" [Photo]. Retrieved from Pexels.
Cultural Revolution
Separating truth from propaganda in China has always been hard, not least when it comes to numbers. Accountants, of all people, were seen as such a threat that during the 1960s they were packed off to re-education camps, dooming the profession for decades afterward. Even in kindlier times, busine...
By Economist Staff • Jan. 11, 2007