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The Voice of America was founded in 1942, to combat Nazi propaganda with credible news reports. Its formal charter, created in 1976, guarantees: âVOA will serve as a consistently reliable and authoritative source of newsâ and will be âaccurate, objective, and comprehensive.â In 1994, Congress enacted the United States International Broadcasting Act of 1994, which formally codified these standards into federal law. (22 U.S.C. § 6202(c)(1).)
The IBA also established the position of Chief Executive Officer of the Broadcasting Board of Governors. Federal law specifically states: âThe Secretary of State and the Chief Executive Officer [of the Broadcasting Board], in carrying out their functions, shall respect the professional independence and integrity of the Board, its broadcasting services, and the grantees of the Board.â (22 U.S.C. § 6204(b).)
In June of 2020, when Trump announced that he was replacing the CEO with Michael Pack--a guy who used to make documentaries with Steve Bannon--the current CEO and the rest of the BBG (now also known as the U.S. Agency for Global Media) felt it necessary to confirm the foregoing principles in a formal federal regulation entitled âFirewall and Highest Standards of Professional Journalism.â The regulation reaffirms:
âAll USAGM-funded Networks must adhere to the highest professional standards of journalism ... in order to produce news which is consistently reliable and authoritative, accurate, objective, and comprehensive.â
The regulation also addresses Trumpâs habit of pressuring government entities to support whatever he says, and his equally noxious habit of viciously attacking any news organization that is anything short of laudatory, by expressly clarifying that it is improper misconduct when:
â...any person within the Executive Branch or a Network, but outside the newsroom, attempts to direct, pressure, coerce, threaten, interfere with, or otherwise impermissibly influence any of the USAGM networks, including their leadership, officers, employees, or staff, in the performance of their journalistic and broadcasting duties and activities. ... Such impermissible influence would undermine the journalistic and editorial independence, and thus the credibility, of that USAGM network, and their reporters, editors, or other journalists.â
As David Kligerman, the agencyâs general counsel, explained: âThe key to the credibility of any news organization is editorial independence and adherence to the professional standards of journalism.â
Trumpâs appointee lived up down to expectations almost immediately.
Pack âinvestigated the agencyâs journalists for bias against President Trump and pushed for their dismissals and reassignments.â
Pack also âinstigated investigations of ... VOAâs White House bureau chief over perceived anti-Trump bias.â
âPack has purged USAGM and its broadcasters of top executives whom he believed to be insufficiently loyal.â
Pack suspended general counsel David Kligerman in August.
Pack âignored a subpoenaâ that the House Foreign Affairs Committee issued to compel his testimony before Congress.
âHe has embraced Trumpâs talk of a so-called âdeep stateâ thwarting the presidentâs priorities at USAGM.â
Now Pack has decided that the âprofessional independence and integrityâ the CEO owes under federal law doesnât require him (or Trump) to allow the VOA and her sister stations any actual âindependence.â Indeed, as far as he is concerned, allowing the VOA any âindependenceâ would interfere with the CEOâs duty to âdirectâ and âsupervise.â He also maintains that the phrase âhighest standards of journalismâ is too âvagueâ for him or anyone else to comply with, or even understand.
So Pack unilaterally repealed the regulation in its entirety, effective immediately.
Pack announced the repeal âat 10:18 p.m. Eastern Time in a note to all of USAGM's several thousand employees, on the same night as the swearing-in of a new U.S. Supreme Court justice, and just eight days before Election Day.â Conveniently enough, Pack also declared that his repeal is âexempt from review,â and that all provisions requiring ânotice of proposed rulemakingâ and âopportunity for public participationâ are âinapplicable.â
Trump finally got the state-run global news network he always envied.
#media#usagm#us agency for global media#michael pack#voice of america#Agency for Global Media#Pack#VOA#Broadcasting Board of Governors#BBG#IBA#International Broadcasting Act#Kligerman#David Kligerman#Herman#Steven Herman#news#journalism#standards#independence#integrity#firewall#Trump administration#state run media#propaganda#dictatorship
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Starting Lineup for the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway
1. Kyle Busch
2. Joey Logano
3. Denny Hamlin
4. Erik Jones
5. Brad Keselowski
6. Ryan Newman
7. Jamie McMurray
8. Ryan Blaney
9. Aric Almirola
10. Daniel Suarez
11. Kyle Larson
12. Austin Dillon
13. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
14. Paul Menard
15. Martin Truex Jr.
16. Kurt Busch
17. Matt Kenseth
18. Chris Buescher
19. David Ragan
20. Ty Dillon
21. William Byron
22. Chase Elliott
23. Jimmie Johnson
24. Bubba Wallace Jr.
25. Ross Chastain
26. Kasey Kahne
27. Alex Bowman
28. Clint Bowyer
29. Michael McDowell
30. AJ Allmendinger
31. Matt DiBenedetto
32. Parker Kligerman
33. Corey LaJoie
34. Gray Gaulding
35. Landon Cassill
36. Timmy Hill
37. Jeffrey Earnhardt
38. BJ McLeod
39. Kevin Harvick
40. JJ Yeley
#Coca-Cola 600#MENCS#Lineup#charlotte motor speedway#Kyle Busch#Joey Logano#Denny Hamlin#Erik Jones#Brad Keselowski#Ryan Newman#aric almirola#daniel suarez#kyle larson#austin dillon#Ricky Stenhouse Jr#Paul Menard#Martin Truex Jr.#Kurt Busch#Matt Kenseth#chris buescher#David Ragan#Ty Dillon#william byron#Chase Elliott#Jimmie Johnson#bubba wallace jr#ross chastain#Kasey Kahne#ALEX BOWMAN#Clint Bowyer
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Trump-appointed head of World Media company resigns at Biden's request Pack, a conservative documentary filmmaker who turned CEO in June, has been broadly criticized for his stewardship of the worldwide information providers below USAGM, together with the Voice of America. âThe brand new administration has requested my resignation,â Pack wrote in a letter to employees. âUSAGM and the CEO place are supposed to be non-partisan,â Pack stated. âAs such, each single day, I used to be solely centered upon reorienting the company towards its mission. I sought, above all, to assist the company share Americaâs story with the world objectively and with out bias.â In one in every of his final acts, Pack on Tuesday introduced new boards of administrators for the Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Radio Free Asia, and Center East Broadcasting Networks, three different information organizations below USAGMâs supervision. The members are conservative discuss radio host Blanquita Cullum; Jonathan Alexander from the conservative, anti-LGBTQ Liberty Counsel; pro-Trump filmmaker Amanda Milius; Roger Simon, who based on his LinkedIn writes for the Epoch Occasions, the pro-Trump paper with ties to Falun Gong; and Christian Whiton, a fellow on the Heart for Nationwide Curiosity who served within the Trump and Bush administrations. Pack not too long ago made information for telling VOAâs White Home reporter that she was ânot licensedâ to ask Secretary of State Mike Pompeo a query. The reporter, Patsy Widakuswara, was subsequently demoted twice, with out rationalization. Since Packâs arrival at USAGM, he âhas tried to whitewash the primacy of the journalistic mission: each figurative and actually,â stated David Kligerman, the previous basic counsel at VOA till he was allegedly pressured out by Pack final month. âOn his first day, he painted over an epigraph (by his predecessor John Lansing) celebrating the First Modification and the sacred obligation of journalists to carry public officers accountable.â In December, the federal watchdog group Workplace of Particular Counsel stated it âdiscovered a considerable chance of wrongdoingâ throughout an investigation of the company, which was prompted by a grievance filed by six senior officers who alleged that Pack had abused his authority. Kligerman stated on the file what many others at VOA echo privately â that Pack has since âwaged warfare towards the Companyâs journalists and editorial independence,â together with by firing all of the community heads and rescinding the companyâs firewall regulation meant to insulate it from political meddling, refusing âto resume J1 visas for our journalists for purely nativist causes, forcing them overseas; and pretextually firing journalists for protecting tales perceived to be dangerous to the administration.â Supply hyperlink #agency #Bidens #Global #Media #MichaelPack:Trump-appointedheadofGlobalMediaagencyresignsatBiden'srequest-CNN #Request #Resigns #Trumpappointed
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Trump-appointed head of Global Media agency resigns at Biden's request
New Post has been published on https://appradab.com/trump-appointed-head-of-global-media-agency-resigns-at-bidens-request/
Trump-appointed head of Global Media agency resigns at Biden's request
Pack, a conservative documentary filmmaker who became CEO in June, has been widely criticized for his stewardship of the international news services under USAGM, including the Voice of America.
âThe new administration has requested my resignation,â Pack wrote in a letter to staff.
âUSAGM and the CEO position are meant to be non-partisan,â Pack said. âAs such, every single day, I was solely focused upon reorienting the agency toward its mission. I sought, above all, to help the agency share Americaâs story with the world objectively and without bias.â
In one of his last acts, Pack on Tuesday announced new boards of directors for the Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Radio Free Asia, and Middle East Broadcasting Networks, three other news organizations under USAGMâs supervision.
The members are conservative talk radio host Blanquita Cullum; Jonathan Alexander from the conservative, anti-LGBTQ Liberty Counsel; pro-Trump filmmaker Amanda Milius; Roger Simon, who according to his LinkedIn writes for the Epoch Times, the pro-Trump paper with ties to Falun Gong; and Christian Whiton, a fellow at the Center for National Interest who served in the Trump and Bush administrations.
Pack recently made news for telling VOAâs White House reporter that she was ânot authorizedâ to ask Secretary of State Mike Pompeo a question. The reporter, Patsy Widakuswara, was subsequently demoted twice, without explanation.
Since Packâs arrival at USAGM, he âhas attempted to whitewash the primacy of the journalistic mission: both figurative and literally,â said David Kligerman, the former general counsel at VOA until he was allegedly forced out by Pack last month. âOn his first day, he painted over an epigraph (by his predecessor John Lansing) celebrating the First Amendment and the sacred duty of journalists to hold public officials accountable.â
In December, the federal watchdog group Office of Special Counsel said it âfound a substantial likelihood of wrongdoingâ during an investigation of the agency, which was prompted by a complaint filed by six senior officials who alleged that Pack had abused his authority.
Kligerman said on the record what many others at VOA echo privately â that Pack has since âwaged war against the Agencyâs journalists and editorial independence,â including by firing all the network heads and rescinding the agencyâs firewall regulation meant to insulate it from political meddling, refusing âto renew J1 visas for our journalists for purely nativist reasons, forcing them out of the country; and pretextually firing journalists for covering stories perceived to be harmful to the administration.â
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Denny Hamlin wins Daytona 500 after 3 major crashes in final laps
The ending of the Daytona 500 was a wild one, with a massive 18-car crash at the front of the pack setting up a sprint at the end,
The NASCAR Cup Series is officially underway, and the first big victory of the season goes to Denny Hamlin of Joe Gibbs Racing, who managed first place in the Daytona 500 on Sunday.
The race was thrown for a loop when a massive 18-car wreck happened with nine laps to go, drawing a red flag and prompting a sprint to the finish wish a severely weakened field. That massive wreck was followed by a smaller wreck shortly after the race resumed with 7 remaining laps.
That made it, essentially, a 2-lap sprint. And once they got going again ... they crashed again, sending it into a 2-lap overtime. There were two Toyotas, two Fords and two Chevrolets in that order when the final restart happened. Hamlin managed to get past Kyle Busch right away, and then Joey Logano shot up past Busch as well, into second behind Hamlin. Hamlin would go on to hold on to the lead.
William Byron had pole position for the race, his first at the Daytona 500. His Hendrick Motorsports teammate, Alex Bowman, qualified in second. Between them, there were just there Daytona 500 starts, but in the rows behind, well-known veterans like Kevin Harvick, Joey Logano, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., and Clint Bowyer loomed.
Before the race, as the drivers were taking a formation lap around the track, Byron told the FOX broadcast team over the radio that he wasnât worried about what anybody behind him thinks. After the first round of pit stops, heâd fallen down to around fifth on the grid, but was holding his own.
The first caution came when LaJoie lost some bodywork after cutting his right-front tire. The second came when Kurt Busch and Bubba Wallace were involved in a crash jut out of Turn 2.
After the first stage, Kyle Busch held the lead, ahead of Bowman and Logano on the outside. Byron was down to 13th after the first 60 laps. Logano got the lead at the start of stage two, and was battling back and forth with Daniel Suarez after Busch dropped back.
Throughout the race, the Toyota and Chevy cars were generally faster than the Fords. Byron made his way back up to fourth, with Bowman in third behind Kyle Busch Matt DiBenedetto halfway through the second stage. The third caution came out when Casey Mears and Parker Kligerman connected with 13 laps to go in Stage 2.
After some more pit stops, the second stage ended with Ryan Blaney on top, but the usual suspects around him. Byron had the lead back at the start of the third stage, and the 80-lap race was on. Byron was immediately scrapping with Jimmie Johnson, Stenhouse and Kevin Harvick.
Another caution occurred when Cody Ware and BJ McLeod wrecked going into the pit lane, and that collected some others, including Tyler Reddick, Johnson and Stenhouse. It was a messy, messy incident and it also caused the pit lane to be closed.
That is not ideal for Jimmie Johnson. pic.twitter.com/9nzmFUvF46
â FOX: NASCAR (@NASCARONFOX) February 17, 2019
After that dustup, Denny Hamlin had the lead, followed by Bowman and Kyle Bush. Bowman had been hovering around the 13 range for much of the race, but he picked his moments well. At that time, Byron was running in sixth. Another caution followed as Kyle Larson made contact with the outside wall, prompting Byron and others to pit with 18 laps to go.
With 15 to go the top was Hamlin, Kyle Busch, Bowyer, DiBenedetto and McDowell. The ninth caution of the day came when the veteran, Brad Keselowski, spun out and seemed to suffer a mechanical failure. And shortly after that, we had a massive wreck!
A total of 18 cars were involved, including all of Austin Dillon, Ryan Newman, Daniel Hemric, Chase Elliott, Aric Almirola, Ryan Blaney, Ty Dillon, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Martin Treux Jr., Erik Jones, Paul Menard, Tyler Reddick, Matt Tifft, Chris Buescher, David Ragan, Daniel Suarez, Kyle Larson, Jimmie Johnson, and Matt DiBenedetto.
The Big One strikes in the closing laps at @DISupdates.#DAYTONA500 pic.twitter.com/wBHo7EH6Ok
â NASCAR (@NASCAR) February 17, 2019
The red flag came out, and the top five was Kyle Busch, Hamlin, Bowyer, McDowell and Harvick. Those guys just missed the wreck, which began at the start of the pack on the outside wall. When they got going again, there was another wreck almost immediately. Larson, Stenhouse, Harvick, Elliott, Bowman, Keselowski and Ty Dillon were all involved in it.
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Kyle Larson wins second-career road course pole at Sonoma
Kyle Larson hasnât finished in the top 10 in any of his previous four Sonoma starts. (AP Photo/Derik Hamilton)
Kyle Larson will lead a bevy of Chevys to the green flag Sunday at Sonoma.
Larson got his second-ever road course pole on during Saturdayâs qualifying session and is one of four Chevy drivers who will start in the top five. Martin Truex Jr., who starts second, is the only non-Chevy driver in the top five.
Chevy has struggled so far in 2018 with its new Camaro car design. Its only win has come when Austin Dillon led the final lap â his only lap led â to win the season-opening Daytona 500.
Larson hasnât finished in the top 10 in any of his previous four Sonoma starts. A win on Sunday would not only qualify him for the playoffs but make him the 10th different winner in the last 10 races at Sonoma.
The first round of qualifying was bizarre as a car blew an engine late during a K&N West Series session before qualifying. NASCAR put drying material down on the track for the fluid that had been dispersed but the track was very clearly not clean and NASCAR went green with qualifying anyway. That meant many drivers were afraid to try a qualifying lap in the first 15 minutes of the 25-minute first round.
Clint Bowyer, who posted the fastest speed in one of the two practice sessions Friday, was not happy.
Sit around here all day to get a lap of qualifying in. Track was clearly not ready and forces 40 cars to try and make a lap in the last 5 mins. Not 1 but 2 cars pull out in front of ya. Real nice!
â Clint Bowyer (@ClintBowyer) June 23, 2018
 Hereâs the full starting lineup.
1. Kyle Larson 2. Martin Truex Jr. 3. Chase Elliott 4. Jamie McMurray 5. AJ Allmendinger 6. Kevin Harvick 7. Jimmie Johnson 8. William Byron 9. Kyle Busch 10. Brad Keselowski 11. Ryan Blaney 12. Joey Logano 13. Trevor Bayne 14. Ryan Newman 15. Paul Menard 16. Daniel Suarez 17. Alex Bowman 18. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 19. Clint Bowyer 20. Erik Jones 21. Denny Hamlin 22. Michael McDowell 23. Kurt Busch 24. Aric Almirola 25. Chris Buescher 26. Kasey Kahne 27. Austin Dillon 28. David Ragan 29. Gray Gauldin 30. Matt DiBenedetto 31. Ty Dillon 32. Cole Whitt 33. Justin Marks 34. Parker Kligerman 35. Bubba Wallace 36. Chris Cook 37. Tomy Drissi 38. Cody Ware
â â â â â â â
Nick Bromberg is a writer for Yahoo Sports.
Follow @NickBromberg on Twitter
More from Yahoo Sports: ⢠Father pulls son from fiery local NASCAR wreck, gets probation from track ⢠LaVarâs master plan foiled as LiAngelo doesnât get drafted ⢠Sixth cheerleader sues Texans, says coach duct-taped her body ⢠Mexico maintains perfect World Cup start
#_uuid:114f45f3-d98d-3ec9-b9c8-bb7c6972ee81#_lmsid:a077000000CFoGyAAL#_author:Nick Bromberg#_revsp:de666450-3434-45fa-ac3d-ea6088f81691
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5 Small Patio Ideas
Create Zones
Designating âzonesâ for different functions can actually make a small space seem largerâtry separating a small backyard with a sitting area, a bar station, and even a tiny garden display. âThis is all about maximizing square footage by creating zones whenever possible,â says interior designer Caitlin Murray of Black Lacquer Design. âFor a tiny patio, I believe itâs better to have various smaller-scaled furniture that serves different purposesâso a bistro table for dining and a small outdoor loveseat for lounging, rather than choosing between a large sofa or a dining setup for six. Youâre likely going to want the best of both worlds and splitting the difference somehow makes the space bigger.â
Invest In Multifunctional Pieces
With limited square footage, aim for furniture that can do double duty. âLook for small-scale multifunctional pieces that can also brighten up your space,â says Mia Jung, director of interiors at Ike Kligerman Barkley. âA small stool can hold your morning coffee when solo, or double as extra seating when you have friends over.â But you might want to ditch the bulky pieces: âCarefully select furniture for tiny patios,â says interior designer James Wheeler of J. Wheeler Designs. Use slipper chairs rather than traditional armchairsâthe absence of arms keeps the area open.â
Try a Vertical Hanging Garden
âWhen you have a small outdoor space, consider going vertical with your plants,â says Chris Lambton, professional landscaper and host of DIY Networkâs Yard Crashers. âThere are a number of DIY projects and products available to help you achieve a vertical garden. Fill the space with colorful flowers, vines, and herbs.â If you donât have much of a green thumb, interior designer Kyle Schuneman has a solution: âI love hanging planters because it gives you greenery without taking up precious floor space.â If you do have enough square footage to add a floor plant or two, or you have some surface area to display potted plants, experiment with scale and dimension. âAdding planters of varying height to a small patio or balcony gives the sense of a larger space by directing the eye in different directions and creating interest on different levels,â says interior designer Amanda Reynal of Amanda Reynal Interiors.
Donât Forget About Lighting
You donât want to leave yourself (or your guests) in the dark. âIâve always loved table lamps on porches,â says interior designer Dana Gibson. âEven on a small porch, a table lamp adds ambience and makes the space at night even more magical and cozy.â If you donât have a spot to place a lamp, you can also opt for outdoor string lights, which still lend a dreamy effect and create the perfect atmosphere for enjoying that summer nighttime air.
Accessorize
Personalize your outdoor space with colorful and unique dĂŠcor accents. âAdding a small outdoor rug can make the space feel like an extra room,â says Jung. âAdd a small plant or two and youâre ready to enjoy summer!â And pile on the pillows: âIâm a big fan of comfy pillows for hard outdoor furniture, which can make your little slice of the outdoors an open-air living room,â says designer and event planner David Stark. âMy trick? I cut up and sew inexpensive terry cloth bath and beach towels to create pillows. When the need arises, you can just throw the pillowcases in the washer and dryer.â
This article was originally written by Sarah Yang and appeared first on www.RealSimple.com
5 Small Patio Ideas was re-posted from www.DreamBackyardBuilders.com
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Credit Suisse just hired 2 top research analysts away from UBS, and it establishes a clear trend
REUTERS/Stefano Rellandini/File Photo
Credit Suisse hired two top research analysts away from UBS.
Doug Mitchelson joins the bank as managing director in equity research covering the media, cable/satellite, and telecommunications sectors. Brian Russo joins as a vice president working in the same sector.Â
The bank has now hired at least six managing directors in research from UBS recent months. They're part of a wave of hires the bank has recently made to beef up its research division.Â
Credit Suisse has hired two high-level equity research analysts away from Swiss rival UBS, part of a wave of hires the bank has made in recent months to load up on research firepower.Â
Doug Mitchelson joins the bank as managing director in equity research covering the media, cable/satellite, and telecommunications sectors, according to a memo seen by Business Insider.
Previously he worked for three years at UBS as a senior media analyst and before that spent 17 years as an analyst with Deutsche Bank.
"Given the increasing convergence and consolidation of these sectors, we believe having a single, combined team allows for synergies and deeper insights," David Bleustein, head of research in the Americas for Credit Suisse, wrote in the memo. "Doug brings significant experience to this role having spent over 20 years as a sell-side analyst covering the Media and Cable/Satellite sectors."
Mitchelson joins Brian Russo, who was recently hired as a vice president covering the same sector. He worked with Mitchelson in media equity research at UBS before joining Credit Suisse, and Deutsche Bank before that.Â
A Credit Suisse spokesman confirmed the hires.
Bleustein himself was hired this summer from UBS, where he started as an industrials analyst in 1999 and ran the equity research divsion in the US since 2008.Â
The bank has only ramped up its investment in research since.
Other managing directors in research that have joined Credit Suisse since the summer include:
Jonathan Golub, chief US equity strategist
Marty Auster, mid- and small-cap biotechnology analyst
AJ Rice, managed care and healthcare facilities
Michael Binetti, softlines and department stores
Bill Featherston, energy exploration and production and integrated oil
Kristina Kazarian, master limited partnerships and refiners
Andrew Kligerman, life insurance
Of that group, all but one worked at UBS in the past four years, and four joined directly from UBS. Given the hire of Bleustein from UBS, and the hire of Mitchelson, that means Credit Suisse has now hired at least six managing directors in research from UBS in recent months.
 The rash of research hires comes ahead of new European regulations set to go live in January â known as MiFID II â that are expected to result in slashed research budgets across Wall Street.Â
Mary Erdoes, the head of JPMorgan's $1.9 trillion asset and wealth management business, recently explained the impacts and looming industry cuts to a room full of analysts at a conference.
"On the buy side, the larger firms will absorb the costs and figure out how that cascades its way through," Erdoes said. "It probably means they'll tighten up a lot on what they spend on sell-side research, which is why the two go hand in hand."
Erdoes plainly laid out what happens next: "IÂ was dealing with 10 of you; I don't want 10 of you anymore, I only want the five best of you."Â
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Credit Suisse just hired 2 top research analysts away from UBS, and it establishes a clear trend
New Post has been published on http://foursprout.com/wealth/credit-suisse-just-hired-2-top-research-analysts-away-from-ubs-and-it-establishes-a-clear-trend/
Credit Suisse just hired 2 top research analysts away from UBS, and it establishes a clear trend
Credit Suisse hired two top research analysts away from UBS.
Doug Mitchelson joins the bank as managing director in equity research covering the media, cable/satellite, and telecommunications sectors. Brian Russo joins as a vice president working in the same sector.Â
The bank has now hired at least six managing directors in research from UBS recent months. Theyâre part of a wave of hires the bank has recently made to beef up its research division.Â
Credit Suisse has hired two high-level equity research analysts away from Swiss rival UBS, part of a wave of hires the bank has made in recent months to load up on research firepower.Â
Doug Mitchelson joins the bank as managing director in equity research covering the media, cable/satellite, and telecommunications sectors, according to a memo seen by Business Insider.
Previously he worked for three years at UBS as a senior media analyst and before that spent 17 years as an analyst with Deutsche Bank.
âGiven the increasing convergence and consolidation of these sectors, we believe having a single, combined team allows for synergies and deeper insights,â David Bleustein, head of research in the Americas for Credit Suisse, wrote in the memo. âDoug brings significant experience to this role having spent over 20 years as a sell-side analyst covering the Media and Cable/Satellite sectors.â
Mitchelson joins Brian Russo, who was recently hired as a vice president covering the same sector. He worked with Mitchelson in media equity research at UBS before joining Credit Suisse, and Deutsche Bank before that.Â
A Credit Suisse spokesman confirmed the hires.
Bleustein himself was hired this summer from UBS, where he started as an industrials analyst in 1999 and ran the equity research divsion in the US since 2008.Â
The bank has only ramped up its investment in research since.
Other managing directors in research that have joined Credit Suisse since the summer include:
Jonathan Golub, chief US equity strategist
Marty Auster, mid- and small-cap biotechnology analyst
AJ Rice, managed care and healthcare facilities
Michael Binetti, softlines and department stores
Bill Featherston, energy exploration and production and integrated oil
Kristina Kazarian, master limited partnerships and refiners
Andrew Kligerman, life insurance
Of that group, all but one worked at UBS in the past four years, and four joined directly from UBS. Given the hire of Bleustein from UBS, and the hire of Mitchelson, that means Credit Suisse has now hired at least six managing directors in research from UBS in recent months.
 The rash of research hires comes ahead of new European regulations set to go live in January â known as MiFID II â that are expected to result in slashed research budgets across Wall Street.Â
Mary Erdoes, the head of JPMorganâs $1.9 trillion asset and wealth management business, recently explained the impacts and looming industry cuts to a room full of analysts at a conference.
âOn the buy side, the larger firms will absorb the costs and figure out how that cascades its way through,â Erdoes said. âIt probably means theyâll tighten up a lot on what they spend on sell-side research, which is why the two go hand in hand.â
Erdoes plainly laid out what happens next: âI was dealing with 10 of you; I donât want 10 of you anymore, I only want the five best of you.âÂ
Join the conversation about this story Âť
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Trump Regime Installs Conspiracy Theorist to Help Build Propaganda Network With Taxpayer Money The U.S. Agency for Global Media, a government-run news company that traces its roots to the first Cold War, has hired far-right commentator and conspiracy theorist Frank Wuco, according to a new report from Politico. Itâs just the latest sign that President Donald Trump is attempting to build his own media empire⌠Read more...
#david kligerman#Donald Trump#frank wuco#grant turner#information warfare#new cold war#president trump#radio history#red mind solutions#smith mundt act#trump regime#trump tv#united states information agency#us agency for global media#us information agency#usagm#usia
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Kyle Busch dominates for Coca-Cola 600 victory
Kyle Busch (18) drives his car out of Turn 4 during the NASCAR Cup Series auto race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Charlotte, N.C., Sunday, May 27, 2018. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)
Kyle Busch has now won at every track heâs raced at in NASCARâs Cup Series.
Busch was unbeatable during Sundayâs Coca-Cola 600 and scored his first points win at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The win means thereâs not one track
on the Cup schedule where Busch hasnât won at. Itâs an impressive feat; no other driver in the Cup Series can claim such an accomplishment. Busch led 377 of the races 400 laps.
Busch started on the pole and lost the lead early to Joey Logano. That was about the only time he didnât have he lead. He won each of the first three stages of the race and sprinted out to a nearly six-second win over defending Cup Series champion Martin Truex Jr.
Busch won the 2017 All-Star Race at Charlotte for his first win in a Cup Series car at the track. But it wasnât a points win, so it didnât officially count. Sunday does, and he now has 47 Cup Series wins spread across 23 Cup Series tracks.
For perspective, Richard Petty â the all-time Cup Series win leader with 200 â made five or more starts at five different tracks without a win. Busch has 13 or more starts at every track but Kentucky Speedway, so itâs not an apples-to-apples comparison. But Buschâs accomplishment is proof of how diverse he is as a driver.
With four victories, Busch is also just one win behind Kevin Harvick for the series lead. Harvick started at the back on Sunday and worked his way to the front in the first stage. But an apparent flat left-front tire forced Harvickâs car into the wall and he ended up finishing last. It was the first time in Harvickâs NASCAR career that he finished last.
 Full results:
1. Kyle Busch 2. Martin Truex Jr. 3. Denny Hamlin 4. Brad Keselowski 5. Jimmie Johnson 6. Jamie McMurray 7. Kyle Larson 8. Kurt Busch 9. Alex Bowman 10. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 11. Chase Elliott 12. Clint Bowyer 13. Aric Almirola 14. Paul Menard 15. Daniel Suarez 16. Darrell Wallace Jr. 17. Matt Kenseth 18. Michael McDowell 19. Erik Jones 20. Kasey Kahne 21. Ty Dillon 22. Joey Logano 23. AJ Allmendinger 24. Ross Chastain 25. David Ragan 26. Corey LaJoie 27. Parker Kligerman 28. Landon Cassill 29. Chris Buescher 30. Jeffrey Earnhardt 31. Gray Gaulding 32. Timmy Hill 33. BJ McLeod 34. Austin Dillon 35. Ryan Newman 26. Ryan Blaney 37. Matt DiBenedetto 38. JJ Yeley 39. William Byron 40. Kevin Harvick
â â â â â â â
Nick Bromberg is a writer for Yahoo Sports.
Follow @NickBromberg on Twitter
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Credit Suisse just hired 2 top research analysts away from UBS, and it establishes a clear trend
REUTERS/Stefano Rellandini/File Photo
Credit Suisse hired two top research analysts away from UBS.
Doug Mitchelson joins the bank as managing director in equity research covering the media, cable/satellite, and telecommunications sectors. Brian Russo joins as a vice president working in the same sector.Â
The bank has now hired at least six managing directors in research from UBS recent months. They're part of a wave of hires the bank has recently made to beef up its research division.Â
Credit Suisse has hired two high-level equity research analysts away from Swiss rival UBS, part of a wave of hires the bank has made in recent months to load up on research firepower.Â
Doug Mitchelson joins the bank as managing director in equity research covering the media, cable/satellite, and telecommunications sectors, according to a memo seen by Business Insider.
Previously he worked for three years at UBS as a senior media analyst and before that spent 17 years as an analyst with Deutsche Bank.
"Given the increasing convergence and consolidation of these sectors, we believe having a single, combined team allows for synergies and deeper insights," David Bleustein, head of research in the Americas for Credit Suisse, wrote in the memo. "Doug brings significant experience to this role having spent over 20 years as a sell-side analyst covering the Media and Cable/Satellite sectors."
Mitchelson joins Brian Russo, who was recently hired as a vice president covering the same sector. He worked with Mitchelson in media equity research at UBS before joining Credit Suisse, and Deutsche Bank before that.Â
A Credit Suisse spokesman confirmed the hires.
Bleustein himself was hired this summer from UBS, where he started as an industrials analyst in 1999 and ran the equity research divsion in the US since 2008.Â
The bank has only ramped up its investment in research since.
Other managing directors in research that have joined Credit Suisse since the summer include:
Jonathan Golub, chief US equity strategist
Marty Auster, mid- and small-cap biotechnology analyst
AJ Rice, managed care and healthcare facilities
Michael Binetti, softlines and department stores
Bill Featherston, energy exploration and production and integrated oil
Kristina Kazarian, master limited partnerships and refiners
Andrew Kligerman, life insurance
Of that group, all but one worked at UBS in the past four years, and four joined directly from UBS. Given the hire of Bleustein from UBS, and the hire of Mitchelson, that means Credit Suisse has now hired at least six managing directors in research from UBS in recent months.
 The rash of research hires comes ahead of new European regulations set to go live in January â known as MiFID II â that are expected to result in slashed research budgets across Wall Street.Â
Mary Erdoes, the head of JPMorgan's $1.9 trillion asset and wealth management business, recently explained the impacts and looming industry cuts to a room full of analysts at a conference.
"On the buy side, the larger firms will absorb the costs and figure out how that cascades its way through," Erdoes said. "It probably means they'll tighten up a lot on what they spend on sell-side research, which is why the two go hand in hand."
Erdoes plainly laid out what happens next: "IÂ was dealing with 10 of you; I don't want 10 of you anymore, I only want the five best of you."Â
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