McDonald's spending $100M to spur sales after E. Coli outbreak, Bloomberg says » 11:31 MCD CONSIDERING THE McCOLI BURGER DELUXE AS A MENU ITEM...
LOADING DOCK--> LITTLE CONCERNED WE HAVE A BATHTUB DRAIN MOMENT INTO THE CLOSE. Don't quite have the guts... ::::::::::::::TSHA Taysha Gene Therapies, Inc.:::::::::::::::::: $2.02-0.25(-11.01%)1:45 PM 11/15/24 NASDAQ |$USD |Realtime
I rarely ever do this but put a $98.90 stop on SE. SE Sea Limited $101.21-2.12(-2.05%)1:50 PM 11/15/24 NYSE |$USD |Realtime
SHAK- I got rolled a bit on a SHAK short went from being ahead quite a bit to barely getting out even. But I stand by two things. 1> The stk is pricey it has a PE over 100 2> The food absolutely blows. And I have been here a long time and SHAK was damn good in the past we have one right down the street. But their food quality level has dived. It's uneatable. That bad. SHAK going back to $100. SHORT IDEA #1-->SHAK Shake Shack Inc. $122.48-1.59(-1.28%)1:52 PM 11/15/24 NYSE |$USD |Realtime
WATCH $72 FOR STABILITY ZONE-- CARR Carrier Global Corporation $74.35-0.62(-0.83%)1:57 PM 11/15/24 NYSE |$USD |Realtime
I WAS reading my phone and there is a huge scandal in the world of high finance it's a division of Franklen Templeton.. .. Sounds bad. RIYADH — Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson said the firm is focused on doing right by its clients, in her first public comments after the company saw its worst quarter for financial outflows in its history and the Securities and Exchange Commission started a probe into suspicious trading at its fixed-income unit. The California-headquartered investment firm, which manages $1.7 trillion in assets internationally, has taken a dramatic financial hit since announcing in August that Ken Leech, co-head investment officer of its largest subsidiary Western Asset Management, has been put on a leave of absence amid a SEC investigation about derivatives trades for high net-worth clients. The following month saw a whopping nearly $24 billion in outflows from the troubled unit, with a total of $37 billion taken out of the subsidiary in the last three months, according to reporting from the Financial Times. Franklin Templeton’s fixed-income business has also dealt with years of underperformance, which many investors expected to reverse course as money moves into bonds and other fixed-income products, which make up about 30% of the firm’s assets.