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WSJ MoneyBeat
Author: Paul Vigna and Stephen Grocer
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Description
An entertaining look at economic and global market news. Join Paul Vigna and Stephen Grocer as they take the stuffiness out of Wall Street.
20 Episodes
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The latest from the Fed, new consumer data and another week of earnings reports highlight this week's economic calendar. The Wall Street Journal's Sarah Chaney has the preview.
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Author Brad Stone joins MoneyBeat to talk his book, "The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon," a comprehensive look at the story of Amazon.com, and the unique driving force behind it, its founder Jeff Bezos.
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Jean Tirole, Nobel economist and author of "Economics for the Common Good," joins Paul Vigna to discuss how the economy can be used to address social and political issues, as well as whether economics can keep up with what's happening in the real world.
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MoneyBeat previews the coming week's economic calendar with a look at what's expected from the Fed, the jobs report and a big week of earnings reports.
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Technical analyst Ralph Acampora joins Stephen Grocer and Erik Holm to talk about how he created a massive chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average on the side of his barn -- and how its latest milestone has caused him to run out of room.
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The Wall Street Journal's Eric Morath previews the coming week's economic calendar with a look at the final picks for the next Fed chair and a big week of earnings reports.
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Lone Star Capital's Bo Collins talks all things bitcoin trading, with a look at his shift from commodities to blockchain, how cryptocurrencies make money, and why bitcoin can ultimately change the way financial markets work.
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The Wall Street Journal's Paul Vigna and Stephen Grocer catch up with Yale professor of economics Robert Shiller at the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, who explains how to valuate the stock market's latest milestone and what the numbers ultimately mean.
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Fed Chair Janet Yellen's speech and a big week of earnings highlight this week's economic calendar. MoneyBeat breaks it all down.
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BlackRock's Bob Miller joins MoneyBeat to break down the minutes from the Fed's September meeting, what it means for inflation expectations, and its overall impact on economic outlook.
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With activist investor Nelson Peltz rejecting the narrow loss of a board seat at Procter & Gamble, Moneybeat takes bets on what happens next. Then, a look at whether Tesla CEO Elon Musk can really deliver on his big Model 3 promises.
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First, the Wall Street Journal's Harriet Torry previews the week's economic calendar with a look at what's expected from the Fed and new inflation data. Then, Aaron Lucchetti and Rachel Louise Ensign break down a big week of earnings for Big Banks.
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First, Liz Hoffman joins Stephen Grocer and Erik Holm to discuss what Wall Street exec Greg Fleming's role as CEO of Rockefeller & Co. means for the 135-year-old family office -- as well as big banks. Then, Ben Eisen and Akane Otani talk what the S&P 500's latest streak means for an uncertain market.
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UBS Wealth Management's Jon Woloshin joins MoneyBeat to break down the latest UBS Global Real Estate Bubble Index, with an in-depth look at the global housing market and which major cities are in a "bubble risk" zone.
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The Wall Street Journal's Kate Davidson previews the week's economic calendar with what to expect from Fed chair Janet Yellen and Friday's jobs report.
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As governments often target big technology companies seen as too dominant in their respective spaces, the Wall Street Journal's Dan Gallagher and Chris Dieterich join MoneyBeat to talk
where this leaves Big Tech and the five most valuable companies in the world.
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The SEC's breach is fueling doubts about a big database of trades that the agency has touted as a defense against episodes like the 2010 "Flash Crash" -- but it's coming under fire as a hacking risk. The Wall Street Journal's Alexander Osipovich and WSJ Pro Cybersecurity writer Kate Fazzini join MoneyBeat to break it all down.
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The Wall Street Journal's Eric Morath previews the coming week's economic calendar with a look at the newest inflation data, what the current climate says about the economy's future, and a busy week of earnings reports.
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The Wall Street Journal's Henry Williams and security consultant Frank Abagnale Jr., known for inspiring the film 'Catch Me If You Can,' join MoneyBeat to talk about the prevalence of check fraud today and where financial security ultimately stands in a new digital landscape.
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Amid this week's highly anticipated Federal Reserve meeting, the Wall Street Journal's Greg Ip joins MoneyBeat to break down what an expected roll-off of a $4.5 trillion balance sheet means for the markets, and its overall impact on the economy.
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United States
Several years ago, on the steps of a San Francisco courthouse, I heard Tim Cook say, ‘Apple can’t continue to be technology innovators for the world’ before Apple filed a lawsuit against Samsung for allegedly copying the IPhone design. How the tables have turned. Now with a meager 14% world market share Apple is relegated to stamping the iconic trademark on what is essentially a Samsung Galaxy. Ironically the OLED screen and other components Apple is purchasing from Samsung are legacy technology. Samsung has been using OLED technology in their devices and televisions for several years. Here is an idea, instead of buying the new IPhone, buy a Galaxy instead and invest the $400 you save in Samsung stock. The South Koreans must be laughing up their sleeves.