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Rose Conlon

Latest from Rose Conlon

  • Will Biden address antitrust concerns with an executive order?
    Win McNamee/Getty Images

    There are reports the White House could be readying a big push for more competition across the U.S. economy and limits on companies that wield a lot of power. And, a closer look at stock buybacks now that the Federal Reserve has lifted pandemic restrictions on banks that curtailed shareholder payouts.

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  • Author Keith Ferrazzi says remote and hybrid work lets organizations expand who's involved in decision-making.
    Grady Reese/Getty Images

    Author Keith Ferrazzi says remote and hybrid work lets organizations expand who’s involved in decision-making.

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  • Wells Fargo, for instance, is doubling its dividend and plans to buy back $18 billion in stock.
    Spencer Platt/Getty Images

    Dividend hikes and stock buybacks are on the way.

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  • Author Keith Ferrazzi says remote and hybrid work lets organizations expand who's involved in decision-making.
    Grady Reese/Getty Images

    If hybrid and remote work persist as may be the case, Keith Ferrazzi has some ideas to make the meetings shorter, less frequent and much more productive. Plus, United Airlines’ massive plane order and what it says about the future of air travel. And, keeping an eye on rising oil prices and how OPEC may react in a meeting this week.

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  • For decades, countries in Africa have imported 99% of their vaccines, but the COVID pandemic is driving changes to that approach.
    Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: A new United Nations report says unequal distribution of shots is one factor in the loss of trillions of dollars from the global tourism industry, especially in developing countries. For Africa, could ambitious plans to expand vaccine production in Kenya and other countries reduce the need to import shots and aid economies? Plus, why the Euronext stock exchange operator decided to move its computer servers from London to Bergamo, Italy, after Brexit.

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  • Banks are about to start sending a lot of cash to shareholders
    Spencer Platt/Getty Images

    The Federal Reserve has released the nation’s biggest banks from pandemic limits on how much money they can return to shareholders. Banks are preparing to hike dividends and increase buybacks. Also, the latest round of data shows home prices went up yet again. Plus, in states where pandemic unemployment benefits have been cut early, some people left benefit rolls even before deadlines hit. Some of them have found work and some of them haven’t. And, the latest NFT: an orchestra in Tennessee working with a local composer who’s looking for more control over her work.

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  • The chain Wingstop just launched a brand focused on another part of the bird, calling itself "Thighstop."
    Scott Olson/Getty Images

    Food shortages in the U.S. are running deeper right now. At least nine fast-food chains and restaurants surveyed by Reuters acknowledged some of their locations are dealing with shortages of key ingredients and products, as firms deal with end-of-lockdown distortions in supply chains. Plus, Facebook escapes one big antitrust lawsuit … for now. And, a new season of “Million Bazillion,” Marketplace’s podcast about money for kids and their families, and this week’s episode — all about taxes.

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  • India outlines a fresh economic stimulus package
    Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: How rural India, where 70% of the population lives, has been dealing with the costs of coronavirus. And, the head of securities trading at the London Stock Exchange says post-Brexit trading has gone smoothly so far.

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  • We’re still trying to figure out where everyone is going to work
    pxhere

    And one area we’re watching as companies choose when and how to reopen is office furniture. Many businesses actually sold their furniture last year, and now getting facilities ready might not be as simple as dusting off the desks — because there might not be desks left to dust. Plus, a preview for the June data on hiring and unemployment which the government releases this Friday. And, in California, training a workforce to build and maintain electric vehicles.

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  • President Joe Biden's infrastructure plan would make roughly a trillion dollars available to repair roads, bridges and other systems.
    Anna Moneymaker/Pool/Getty Images

    The bipartisan infrastructure deal appears on again after running into some trouble over the weekend. The wrinkle was President Joe Biden suggesting he won’t sign the $1 trillion deal unless a separate bill that Republicans oppose also comes to his desk. Plus, the investment in human capital that comes with the infrastructure deal. And, a new McKinsey report on structural racism in the workplace finds addressing wage disparities could lift 2 million Black Americans into the middle class.

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Rose Conlon