Bill Clinton News
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A booming hotel sales market in San Francisco may continue to avoid properties on Nob Hill, the posh neighborhood overlooking downtown and the bay, as buyers focus on the area surrounding the city’s convention center.
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A booming hotel sales market in San Francisco may continue to avoid properties on Nob Hill, the posh neighborhood overlooking downtown and the bay, as buyers focus on the area surrounding the city’s convention center.
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The tax break for repatriating overseas profits sought by Cisco Systems Inc., Google Inc. and other U.S.-based multinational companies would raise $8.7 billion for the federal government over the next decade, according to an estimate by two economists.
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Shareholders in U.S.-listed companies can thank Standard & Poor’s for making them $1 trillion poorer after the rating firm earlier this month lowered the grade on Treasury securities for the first time to AA+ from AAA. Now, some of the most experienced investors say the stock market losses make no sense.
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A lot of perks come with being president. You’re whisked here and there so that your feet barely touch ground. Heads of state pay their respects. There’s no such thing as a dropped call. You have parties and someone else cleans up.
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Mike Toomey, Bill Burton and Edward Conard: Each of these men is a close ally of one of the would-be next presidents of the United States. All three insist they have no involvement in their close associates’ campaigns.
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U.S. Vice President Joe Biden stressed the importance of the U.S. relations with China yesterday during a meeting in Beijing with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, as Xi emphasized the two governments’ common interests.
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When Gaston Caperton was recruited to run the College Board, owner of the SAT entrance exam, he said he didn’t want to just run “a testing company.”
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Eleven days after lowering the credit rating on the U.S. for the first time, Standard & Poor’s is suffering a downgrade among global investors as American bonds are proving world beaters -- undermining S&P’s mathematical assumptions -- and prompting disbelief among political scientists months after the company upgraded China because of the stability fostered by Communist Party rule.
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Credit Suisse Group AG, the Swiss bank facing possible U.S. indictment for aiding tax evasion, will likely settle with prosecutors by admitting wrongdoing and paying a penalty that may exceed $1 billion, tax lawyers said.
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