Strategy: Page 117


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    Picture This

    Unlike many corporate executives, Jan-Willem Beldman says he doesn’t have a problem with the vision thing. A team leader at Mentor Graphics Corp., a computer hardware and software design company, Beldman can quickly pinpoint up-to-the-minute financial forecasts, peruse regional sales results, or ...

    By John Edwards • Nov. 1, 2005
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    WTO Warns about Higher Oil Prices

    Add slower world-trade growth to the long list of casualties of sharply rising oil prices — a list that already includes higher inflation, larger than expected airline losses, higher chemical costs, and slower consumer spending.The World Trade Organization (WTO) has trotted out a report predictin...

    By Stephen Taub • Oct. 28, 2005
  • Trendline

    Tax 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
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    Downtick for VC Investments in Q3

    Venture-capital firms invested $5.3 billion in 714 companies in the third quarter of 2005, according to a survey by PricewaterhouseCoopers, Thomson Venture Economics, and the National Venture Capital Association.Although the $5.3 billion was 15 percent lower than the figure for the previous quart...

    By Stephen Taub • Oct. 25, 2005
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    Basel Faulty?

    Basel II may at long last be coming soon to a bank near you. And for better or worse, the new international bank regulatory regime promises to shake up the loan market.The accord sets new guidelines for determining how much capital banks in 13 developed countries around the world must hold in res...

    By Randy Myers • Oct. 25, 2005
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    Bush Nominates Bernanke as Fed Chairman

    President Bush has nominated Ben Bernanke, 51, chairman of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers, to be the next chairman of the Federal Reserve Board.If confirmed by the Senate, Bernanke would succeed Alan Greenspan, 79, who has served as Fed chairman since August 1987 — through the longe...

    By Stephen Taub and Dave Cook • Oct. 24, 2005
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    Cisco to Invest $1 Billion in India

    Cisco Systems Inc. is aggressively ramping up its efforts on the subcontinent.The San Jose–based maker of computer-networking equipment will make a $1.1 billion direct investment in its subsidiary Cisco Systems India during the next three years, said company officials, who noted the growing impor...

    By Stephen Taub • Oct. 21, 2005
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    EC Plans to Lighten Antitrust Rules

    The European Commission may be easing up on huge multinational companies.An internal group, led by EC competition commissioner Nellie Kross, plans to make it more difficult for prosecutors to find large companies guilty of breaking antitrust rules, according to The Financial Times, which cited co...

    By Stephen Taub • Oct. 21, 2005
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    A Market for Ideas

    “The granting [of] patents ‘inflames cupidity,’ excites fraud, stimulates men to run after schemes that may enable them to levy a tax on the public, begets disputes and quarrels betwixt inventors, provokes endless lawsuits…The principle of the law from which such consequences flow cannot be just....

    By Kenneth Cukier • Oct. 21, 2005
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    From Push to Pull: The Next Frontier of Innovation

    Ever since 1911, when Frederick Winslow Taylor published The Principles of Scientific Management, businesses have pursued efficiency with a focus that borders on obsession. Nearly a century later, CEOs and management authors are still writing hymns of praise to the benefits of executing operation...

    By The McKinsey Quarterly • Oct. 19, 2005
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    Top Agenda Items for Directors

    The top five issues on the agendas of corporate boards this quarter center on the impact of hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the increasing cost of fuel, rising interest rates, employment needs, and board recruitment, according to a report by Christian & Timbers.The executive search firm, which b...

    By Helen Shaw • Oct. 13, 2005
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    R&D Spending Doesn’t Spell Profit

    Increased investment in research and development rarely buys the financial returns and growth that managers are seeking, according to a new study by Booz Allen Hamilton.The consultancy — which analyzed data from the 1,000 companies in the world that had the highest R&D spending in 2004 (and t...

    By Craig Schneider • Oct. 11, 2005
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    Wedded to a Business

    “You have got to be out of your mind,” said Stan Lawson to his wife, Gabriella Ambrosi, when she told him she was thinking of owning a business.At the time, Lawson — formerly the chief financial officer of Chinzano in Turin, Italy, and at DBS Industries in Middle Valley, California — was working ...

    By Helen Shaw • Oct. 11, 2005
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    Cox on Cross-Border Fraud

    Fraud doesn’t respect national borders, said Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Christopher Cox on Thursday in a video address to an international conference of the American Bar Association.In less than two weeks, reported MarketWatch, he will join Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan...

    By Stephen Taub • Oct. 6, 2005
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    Good News, Bad News

    First came the good news. At the July 26 interim results presentation at his company’s swanky new headquarters in London’s Canary Wharf, David Grigson, CFO of Reuters, Europe’s largest financial news and data company, told shareholders that he would be returning £1 billion ($1.8 billion) followin...

    By Janet Kersnar • Oct. 6, 2005
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    Currency Competition

    Once a decade or so, economists ask whether the dollar’s reign as the world’s number one reserve currency might be at the start of a slow decline. These musings usually coincide with a fall in the dollar’s value. In the past 30 years, the dollar has had four bouts of marked depreciation. During t...

    By Economist Staff • Oct. 5, 2005
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    View from Asia: Complexities of Reporting

    Asia’s phenomenal growth has a logical corollary: multinationals have equally phenomenal expectations for their operations in Asia. CFOs there complain that managers half a world away expect the same precision in planning that they would enjoy elsewhere. Truth is, the diversity and unpredictabili...

    By Tom Leander • Oct. 5, 2005
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    Hurricanes Destroyed 108 Offshore Platforms

    Hurricanes Katrina and Rita destroyed 108 oil and natural-gas offshore platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, and another 53 might not be repaired until next year, according to press reports of assessments by the Department of the Interior.The destroyed platforms accounted for about 1.7 percent of Gulf...

    By Dave Cook • Oct. 4, 2005
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    Know Thy Company’s Self

    In the eyes of the law, a company is a person. It has various legal rights: it can own property, it can sue or be sued, and so on. But does a company have a personality in more than a legal sense?Yes, say some observers, though their understanding of what makes for a corporate personality varies....

    By Edward Teach • Oct. 4, 2005
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    And That Was Before

    Even before Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, CFOs were uneasy about the economy. According to the Duke University/CFO Business Outlook Survey conducted in August, CFOs were less optimistic about the economic prospects of the United States than they have been in four years. Only 29 per...

    By Joseph McCafferty • Oct. 1, 2005
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    Trouble on the Town Green

    Four years ago, Bill Bambrick was looking for a little seed money. Literally. A horticulturist living in Augusta, Georgia, Bambrick had recently formed his own company, Loblolly Bay Landscape. Like most start-ups, Bambrick’s needed cash to pay the bills and a line of credit to help nurture the bu...

    By Helen Shaw • Oct. 1, 2005
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    The Great Thrift Shift

    On March 10th 2005, Ben Bernanke — a former Princeton professor who at the time was a governor of America’s central bank — addressed a gathering of economists in Richmond, Virginia, on America’s gaping current-account deficit. Its causes, he argued, were to be found abroad rather than in American...

    By Economist Staff • Sept. 29, 2005
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    Consumer Confidence Suffers Huge Blow

    Consumer confidence plummeted to its lowest level in nearly two years and suffered its biggest one-month drop in 15 years, according to the Conference Board. The 19-point drop in the board’s monthly index — to 86.6 in September from 105.5 in August — was the largest single-month decline in consum...

    By Stephen Taub • Sept. 27, 2005
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    SEC Delays Small-Company 404 Compliance

    As expected, the Securities and Exchange Commission has granted small companies another year — until July 2007 — before they must report on their internal controls under Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, according to the Associated Press.That is the second time the SEC has given small compan...

    By Stephen Taub • Sept. 21, 2005
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    Katrina and the Housing Market

    New-home construction fell 1.3 percent in August, the second straight month it has declined, according to the Department of Commerce. Last month also marked the first back-to-back decline in housing starts since early 2004, the Associated Press reported.“We see a flattening of housing starts and ...

    By Stephen Taub • Sept. 20, 2005
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    Fed Raises Rates Despite Katrina

    The Federal Reserve has continued its tightening policy by raising the federal funds rate another 25 basis points, to 3.75 percent. This is the 11th hike in the fed funds rate since June 2004.A minority of experts thought the Fed might pause until its next meeting, in two months, given the effect...

    By Stephen Taub • Sept. 20, 2005