| Business News |
Wall Street tumbles, led by financials
(Reuters)
Reuters - Stocks tumbled more than 2 percent on
Thursday after a report showing yet another drop in U.S. home
sales prompted investors to take profits in financial shares,
which had rallied over the past week.
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Microsoft CEO backs Web spending, "done" with Yahoo
(Reuters)
Reuters - Chief Executive Steve
Ballmer on Thursday defended Microsoft Corp's need to
make heavy investments in its Internet businesses but said the
company was "done," for now, with pursuing Yahoo Inc .
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Wachovia CFO Wurtz to leave
(Reuters)
Reuters - Wachovia Corp , which posted a
record $8.86 billion second-quarter loss Tuesday, said Chief
Financial Officer Thomas Wurtz will resign from the
fourth-largest U.S. bank after a successor is named.
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Home sales at 10-year low, jobless claims jump
(Reuters)
Reuters - Jobless claims jumped and the pace
of existing home sales tumbled to a 10-year low as slowing
growth hit hiring and a glut of unsold houses weighed on real
estate, data released on Thursday showed.
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Morgan Stanley aggressively recruiting brokers
(Reuters)
Reuters - Morgan Stanley said on Thursday
it is poaching brokers from Merrill Lynch and other
rivals, accelerating the expansion of its global wealth
management business during a period of turbulence on Wall
Street.
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Jobless claims jump as housing market gets weaker
(AP)
AP - Two cornerstones of the economy — jobs and housing — sank to new depths Thursday, with unemployment claims bolting higher and home prices recording one of their steepest drops on record.
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| IOC eyes healthy profits from Beijing Games - 09, May 2008 |
By Karolos Grohmann
ATHENS (Reuters) - From its dangerously empty coffers in the late 1970s to the multi-billion-dollar revenues from the Beijing 2008 Games, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has managed a remarkable commercial transformation of its prime product, the Olympic Games.
With broadcasting revenues for the period 2005-2008 reaching about $2.5 billion and a top sponsorship program adding some $900 million, the IOC's future certainly looks bright -- a far cry from the looming financial collapse of three decades ago.
The IOC is now a financially robust organization, having reinforced its position as a key player in the lucrative world of sport. It is run by professional managers as opposed to the amateurs with a love of sport who were in charge in the past.
Its financial overhaul in the 1980s, credited to then IOC chief Juan Antonio Samaranch, laid the foundations for its current growth that is expected to continue in the next Games.
IOC President Jacques Rogge told his organization in 2006 that the finances were so healthy the IOC could afford not to stage one edition of the Olympic Games, if forced by some external factor, and still have enough money to organize the Games eight years later.
"The financial prospects are very good," he told a meeting in Seoul. "The financial future of the Olympic movement is secured."
Total Olympic revenues for the most recent completed four-year period (2001-2004) exceeded $4 billion with 53 percent coming from broadcasters, 34 percent from sponsors, 11 from ticketing and 2 percent from licensing.
Some 92 percent of that amount was distributed to the IOC partners -- National Olympic Committees, international sports federations and Games organizing committees -- while 8 percent stayed with the IOC for operational and administrative costs.
(c) 2008 Reuters
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| Other news from Sport category: |
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CHICAGO (Reuters) - Tribune Co on Wednesday narrowed the potential list of bidders for the storied Chicago Cubs baseball team to 3-5 groups bidding $1 billion or more, according to sources briefed on the matter.
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BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraq have been banned from next month's Beijing Games because of a government decision to disband the country's National Olympic Committee (NOC), a senior official said on Thursday.
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NAKHABINO, Russia (Reuters) - Twice major winner John Daly is defying doctors' advice and risking serious injury to play in the Russian Open this week.
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NEW YORK (Reuters) - The New York Mets scored two runs in the eighth inning to beat the Philadelphia Phillies 3-1 on Thursday and grab sole possession of first place in the National League East for the first time since April 19.
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TORONTO (Reuters) - A racket-smashing Andy Roddick was shocked 6-4 4-6 6-4 by 19-year-old Croat Marin Cilic in the third round of the Toronto Masters on Thursday.
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SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The agent of U.S. Olympic swimmer Jessica Hardy leapt to her defense on Thursday after media reports said she had tested positive for a banned substance.
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LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Top seed Jelena Jankovic overcame some early jitters before battling to a 7-5 6-2 victory over Vania King at the Los Angeles Classic on Wednesday, the Serb advancing to the third round on a day of several upsets.
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LONDON (Reuters) - Paul Hamm discovered the true meaning of the saying 'all that glitters is not gold' at the Athens Olympics.
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LONDON (Reuters) - A few weeks before the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games, Ben Johnson's race against Carl Lewis over 100 meters in Zurich was one of the most eagerly awaited sporting events of the year.
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TORONTO (Reuters) - The end of Roger Federer's long reign as world number one moved closer when he suffered a shock second-round defeat by Frenchman Gilles Simon at the Toronto Masters on Wednesday.
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