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A CLOSER LOOK AT MAGIC FORMULA INVESTING
(THE PRAGMATIC CAPITALIST, 3/13/10)
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(Investment U, 6/11/07)
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(Dividend Growth Investor, 1/16/10)


[...] In 1993, with her agenda accomplished, Wendy Gramm resigned from her CFTC post to take a seat on the Enron Corp. board as a member of its audit committee. We all know what happened there. Enron’s fraud and implosion became the poster child for deregulation run amok and ultimately helped spawn Sarbanes-Oxley legislation, which has its own issues. [...]
[...] There are eight German companies whose American Depository Receipts (ADRs) have a full sponsored listing on the New York Stock Exchange (several others have moved to the Pink Sheets recently because of the costs of Sarbanes-Oxley compliance). [...]
[...] There are eight German companies whose American Depository Receipts (ADRs) have a full sponsored listing on the New York Stock Exchange (several others have moved to the Pink Sheets recently because of the costs of Sarbanes-Oxley compliance). [...]
[...] Money Morning Special Investment Research Report: International Investing: Why U.S. Investors are “Boxed Out” of Big Global Profits. [...]
[...] However, as our Money Morning research reports have repeatedly underscored, American investors can’t invest in either of these two promising China-based stalwarts. [...]
[...] Richard X. Bove has made much the same recommendation. As readers know from our news stories and investment research reports, we don’t usually put a lot of stock in what Wall Street has to say. But in the last six months, [...]
[...] on the New York Stock Exchange (several others have moved to the Pink Sheets recently because of the costs of Sarbanes-Oxley compliance). Of these, Infineon Technologies AG (OTC ADR: IFNNY), a semiconductor manufacturer, is making a [...]
[...] Etisalat or Omantel are SEC registered, and therefore aren’t available for U.S. investors to buy into. Even so, the strong growth is important because Dubai is a market that savvy U.S. [...]
[...] Money Morning Special Research Report: International Investing: Why U.S. Investors are "Boxed Out" of Big Global Profits. [...]
[...] Regrettably, Acer does not offer American Depositary Receipts, so is not quoted in New York, and is difficult for U.S. retail investors to buy. It is quoted on the Frankfurt exchange, and is available to British investors through the London Stock Exchange’s International Order Book, which consolidates demand worldwide for international companies. Acer may well have avoided New York because of the costs of Sarbanes-Oxley compliance; if so it repr…. [...]
[...] or value are reported to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Section 403(a) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 requires the reporting of insider stock trades within two business days, and the SEC issues an [...]