The Five Dumbest Things on Wall Street This Week
1. Turning Over a New Chief
Once again, the Five Dumbest Things Research Lab plunges into an area of study where few other social scientists dare to dabble: the collective wisdom of press releases. It all started Wednesday when we read a press release from DirecTV Latin America, part-owned by DirecTV parent Hughes Electronics GMH. In the release, the struggling DirecTV LatAm disclosed several measures it was taking to salvage its precarious financial position. But the one that caught our eye was the naming of one Michael A. Feder as the company's chief restructuring officer. Chief restructuring officer! That's a new one, we thought. And a sign of the times, too. Among your so-called C-level positions, you have your classic chief executive officer, chief operating officer and chief financial officer. But as we learned only Tuesday from a Wall Street Journal article, in the 1990s, companies rushed to appoint "chief knowledge officers," only to dump them once times got hard. Just as the rise and fall of the chief knowledge officers seems to say something profound about American business, could the debut of the chief restructuring officer mean something profound as well? Time to do some work, we thought. With the aid of Dow Jones Interactive, we started sifting through press release wires to see what's going on with all the chiefs. Check the chart for some of our key research findings.| Officer! Officer! Frequency of mentions of lesser-known corporate chiefs |
| Source: Dow Jones News Retrieval |
Yahoo! is among the most searched stocks on TheStreet.com. Here's what Cramer had to say about the stock recently.
Catch up on his thinking on the hottest topics of the past week.
Investors will have to deal with a Fed meeting and another flood of earnings and economic data.
Ensco International and Echelon have the potential to move higher in coming days.
See who made what calls.
The addition of video is helping telecom companies compete against cable and satellite companies.
The June West Texas Intermediate contract reflects selling pressure ahead of Tuesday's expiration. But stocks in the sector are generally trading higher.
See who made what calls.
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