Redmond-based Microsoft's board has reportedly voted on Friday to enable shareholders to say more on the manner in which the company's executives are retributed. It seems that the board's plan was to have the firm's executive compensations voted every three years, though the vote would have only a... |
21 September 2009 06:23 GMT |
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No, we're not talking about shareholder Jack Thompson, we're talking about the big ones here: Oppenheimer Funds, Take Two's biggest shareholder and FMR LLC, the second-largest shareholder sold most of their shares, without telling why they actually did it (like there would be a need for official confir... |
11 March 2008 04:29 GMT |
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Don't think that after making a point by turning down Microsoft's unsolicited bid, Yahoo! is going to turn up a few aces from its sleeve. That's not going to happen any time soon and, furthermore, it is still playing the same seldom-winning card of taking over companies and then waiting to see which on... |
14 February 2008 07:06 GMT |
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Yahoo's between the chisel and the hammer right now, with members of the board not agreeing on what to do next, Microsoft breathing heavily down its neck, good people being laid off because of the salary they have and, as of late, because its shareholders have started to voice out about their take on the whole s... |
13 February 2008 14:31 GMT |
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