Posts Tagged ‘ Trends ’


www.bankingandfinanceprogram.com You ever wonder why even students from Oxford and Harvard are getting rejections from Banks and Financial Institutions, but a select few students with barely a 2.1 from an ordinary university have got multiple offers? Hint It’s not because they aren’t intelligent. You can go straight to Video 3 right now and find out… www.bankingandfinanceprogram.com …but first I have to tell you shock and aww is what I FEEL right now. The outpouring of positive responses to the first two videos has been STAGGERING to say the least! So this time, I’m taking it even further: I reveal the 5 major trends that all banking & finance professional to be must be on top of I demystify the myths of securing a Banking & Finance graduate scheme I will even get into the future of employment in banking & Finance Learn how to secure careers at the 3 types of Banking & Finance employers Then I tell you which ones you should be looking at Get Part 3 Right Here: www.bankingandfinanceprogram.com You only have a short time to watch it before I finish with Part 4! Until then, Simon PS If you missed Part 1 and 2, you’re not going to know why the old way of securing a top paying career in Banking and Finance no longer works. That’s okay – when you sign up to get Part 3, you can go back and see anything you missed. Check it all out right here www.bankingandfinanceprogram.com


The VC Panel – Current Mobile Investment Trends Panelists: Matt Murphy (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers), Jake Seid (Lightspeed Venture Partners), Richard Wong (Accel Partners), Rick Segal (JLA Ventures), and Scott Raney (Redpoint Ventures). Moderator: Matt Marshall (VentureBeat).


May 17 (Bloomberg) — Robert Shiller, an economics professor at Yale University and chief economist at MacroMarkets LLC, talks with Bloomberg’s Matt Miller about US stock markets. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)


Is our unemployment level the highest in US history? I would say yes because the job-structure of 1933 America is quite a bit different than it is today. Also the “news claims” data suggests a increasing cumulative number of jobless people in the total economy. Todays market moving statistics don’t mean anything. I do see “Political Economy” using laws to slow the hemorrhaging down in three unproductive fields including government, finance, and healthcare-insurance administration. Nothing is being done to develop the physical economy; this can be done through technology and changes to social structure.