Man City defender Dias signs deal to 2029
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Portugal defender Ruben Dias says he "couldn't imagine playing for anyone
else" after signing a contract extension with Manchester City.
Bankruptcy in Malaysia
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Courtesy of: iMoney.my
http://www.imoney.my/articles/bankruptcy/?utm_source=outbrain&utm_medium=CPC&utm_campaign=Traffic_MY_all_RSS
A reminder to update Picasa
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*We just updated Picasa. To ensure that sharing to Google+ still works,
please update to the latest version or turn on automatic updates. Thanks,
and happy...
Picasa 3.9: Now with Google+ sharing and tagging
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Posted by Chandrashekar Raghavan, Product Manager
Picasa 3.9, the latest update to the Picasa client, is ready for you to try
out! This update includes Goo...
IN THE DARKNESS, STILL .... NOT OUT OF THE WOODS AS YET ; THE EXTREMELY BIG ISSUE is not a NEW ISSUE : ....
The problem with debt is you don't need an actual recession to cause trouble for companies, just the fear of one. Spooked lenders can hike rates on new loans needed to pay off old ones, or cut companies off completely. For companies issuing those risky junk-rated bonds, that day has already arrived. A maker of private planes in Kansas saw rates on its bonds jump 40 percent in just a month. And on Wednesday, a shipping company in Florida filed for bankruptcy because it was unable to borrow to pay off old loans. "They thought, 'We survived that one and we won't have another for 10 years,'" says Martin Fridson, global chief credit strategist at BNP Paribas Investment Partners, speaking of the Great Recession. "But the economy is not out of the woods yet."
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IN THE DARKNESS, STILL .... NOT OUT OF THE WOODS AS YET ; THE EXTREMELY BIG ISSUE is not a NEW ISSUE : ....
The problem with debt is you don't need an actual recession to cause trouble for companies, just the fear of one. Spooked lenders can hike rates on new loans needed to pay off old ones, or cut companies off completely.
For companies issuing those risky junk-rated bonds, that day has already arrived.
A maker of private planes in Kansas saw rates on its bonds jump 40 percent in just a month. And on Wednesday, a shipping company in Florida filed for bankruptcy because it was unable to borrow to pay off old loans.
"They thought, 'We survived that one and we won't have another for 10 years,'" says Martin Fridson, global chief credit strategist at BNP Paribas Investment Partners, speaking of the Great Recession. "But the economy is not out of the woods yet."
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