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  • SEC Charges Former Biotech Company Executive For False Claims About Down Syndrome Test

    Date 02/06/2010

    The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a former executive at a San Diego-based biotechnology company for making false statements to investors about her company's prenatal test for Down syndrome.

  • SIFMA Urges Review Of Implementation Timelines For FASB And IASB Convergence Projects

    Date 02/06/2010

    The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) sent a letter to the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) and the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) urging a review of implementation timelines for FASB and IASB convergence projects.

  • SEC Charges Diebold And Former Executives With Accounting Fraud

    Date 02/06/2010

    The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged Diebold, Inc. and three former financial executives for engaging in a fraudulent accounting scheme to inflate the company's earnings. The SEC separately filed an enforcement action against Diebold's former CEO seeking reimbursement of certain financial benefits that he received while Diebold was committing accounting fraud.

  • Starbucks Store Opens On The NYSE Trading Floor - Standard And Specialty Beverages Available To NYSE Traders And Employees

    Date 02/06/2010

    Starbucks premier coffee, specialty beverages, and select food offerings are now available on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. A first at the NYSE, the Starbucks kiosk will serve the Exchange’s trader and employee community from 8:00am through the 4:00pm NYSE market close.

  • European Parliament: Daylight And Rules For The Derivatives Market

    Date 02/06/2010

    Proposed EU rules on derivatives trading must be made clearer and tougher, so as to reduce speculative trading and ensure that as many derivatives as possible are traded through open channels that are subject to standards, said the Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee in a resolution approved on Wednesday. The committee also suggested ways to regulate who may trade in credit default swaps and to reduce the regulatory burden on corporate end-users of derivatives.