No Data
No Data
No Data
DOMA ALERT: Levi & Korsinsky, LLP Commences an Investigation of Doma Holdings, Inc. (DOMA) F/k/a Capitol Investment Corp. V (CAP)
The following statement is being issued by Levi & Korsinsky, LLP: To: All Persons or Entities who purchased Doma Holdings, Inc. ("DOMA" or the...
SHAREHOLDER ALERT: Levi & Korsinsky, LLP Notifies Investors of an Investigation Into the Fairness of the Merger of Doma Holdings, Inc. and Capitol Investment Corp. V
Morgan Stanley's third-quarter revenue was US$14.753 billion, up 26% year over year
Prior to the US stock market on Thursday, Morgan Stanley announced financial results for the third quarter. According to the data, net revenue for the third quarter was 14.753 billion US dollars, compared to 11.721 billion US dollars in the same period last year, an increase of 26% over the previous year. Among them, non-interest income was US$12.69 billion, compared to US$10.235 billion in the same period last year, up 24% year on year and down 2% month on month. Net interest income was US$2,063 million, compared to US$1,468 million in the same period last year, up 39% year-on-year and 11% month-on-month. Non-interest income is divided by business. Investment bank business revenue was US$3,013 million, compared to 18 in the same period last year
Bezos shared a negative Amazon.Com Inc article more than 20 years ago: don't let anyone tell you who you are.
Amazon.Com Inc founder Jeff Bezos shared on Twitter on Monday a negative article about Amazon.Com Inc more than 20 years ago, just two years after Amazon.Com Inc went public and the world was on the eve of the bursting of the dotcom bubble. The article, published in May 1999, argues that Amazon.Com Inc's stock will be in trouble due to increasingly fierce competition from companies such as Walmart Inc and direct distributors and investors competing for profits. In the two years since the publication of this article, Amazon.Com Inc's share price has fallen 71 per cent. More than 20 years have passed in the twinkling of an eye. After the dotcom bubble burst, many companies went bankrupt, but Amazon.Com Inc survived tenaciously.
Oracle Corp's first-quarter revenue fell 3% less than expected in after-hours trading.
Oracle Corp's shares tumbled 3% after trading on Monday, and the latest results show that the company's first-quarter revenue fell short of market expectations. Oracle Corp's first-quarter adjusted earnings per share were $1.03 per share, with market expectations of 97 cents, while revenue rose 4 per cent year-on-year to $9.73 billion, compared with an expected $9.77 billion, compared with an 8 per cent increase in the previous quarter, according to the results. With regard to earnings guidance, Safra Catz, chief executive of Oracle Corp, said the company expected second-quarter revenue to grow 3 to 5 per cent, with earnings per share of $1.09 to $1.13. The market expects the company's adjusted earnings per share in the second quarter.
The six major Japanese car companies have cut production by more than 1 million vehicles this fiscal year due to a shortage of spare parts.
Due to the shortage of spare parts caused by the expansion of the epidemic in Southeast Asia, six Japanese car companies, including Toyota, plan to cut production by more than 1 million vehicles in the 2021 fiscal year ending in March next year, comparable to the 2020 fiscal year when the expansion of COVID-19 's epidemic led to large-scale production cuts. Toyota announced on Friday that it would cut its global production target for fiscal year 2021 to 9 million vehicles, 300000 fewer than it planned at the beginning of the year. Nissan has announced plans to cut production by 250000 vehicles for the whole year. Honda expects sales to fall by 150000 vehicles for the full year as a result of the production cuts. The one most affected is Suzuki, which plans to reduce production by 350000 vehicles, equivalent to fiscal year 2020
No Data