iWork: reasonomics - principledatum set of reasoning
https://reasonomics.com/
2024-03-29T11:29:02+00:00iWork: reasonomics
https://reasonomics.com/
https://reasonomics.com/_media/wiki:logo.pngtext/html2019-08-17T18:33:52+00:00June Park (meson@undisclosed.example.com)great_recession - created
https://reasonomics.com/principle:great_recession?rev=1566066832&do=diff
Great Recession
The Great Recession (see “Terminology” for other names) was a period of general economic decline (recession) observed in world markets during the late 2000s and early 2010s. The scale and timing of the recession varied from country to country (see map).[1][2] The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has concluded that it was the most severe economic and financial meltdown since the Great Depression and it is often regarded as the second worst downturn of all time.[3][4]text/html2019-04-10T09:45:05+00:00June Park (meson@undisclosed.example.com)activist_hedge_funds - [Types of Activism Investments]
https://reasonomics.com/principle:activist_hedge_funds?rev=1554889505&do=diff
ACTIVIST HEDGE FUNDS
A hedge fund’s job is to make money, bottom line. Over the last twenty years, hedge funds have actively entered the activist arena.
Activist hedge funds make a large enough investment in a company to be able to participate in the management and firm decision making. Activist funds can be looked at taking a private equity approach to the public markets: they are very long-term oriented.