Friday, June 1, 2012

Weekend News

Dow Drops 275 Points as Dismal Jobs Report Sends Markets into Tailspin



 US economy added 69K jobs in May, fewest in a year

US economy added 69,000 jobs in May, fewest in a year; unemployment rate rose to 8.2 percent



 

 

 

 

Stocks Post Worst May Since 2010; FB Jumps


By: JeeYeon Park
CNBC.com Writer












Stocks closed lower Thursday with all three major averages logging their worst May since 2010, driven by mounting concerns over the euro zone debt crisis in addition to worries over a slowing U.S. economy. 

U.S. Economic Momentum Slows



The U.S. grew slower during the first quarter than previously thought and continued weakness in the job market and elsewhere suggest the economy is struggling to gain traction.
On Thursday, the government said gross domestic product—the broadest measure of all goods and services produced in the economy—grew in the January to March period at an annualized 1.9% pace, short of the 2.2% growth previously estimated. This means the economy had less momentum going into the second quarter and comes as fears are growing that a larger global slowdown is under way that could eventually weigh on domestic growth.


Bloomberg Defends Move to Curb Big-Soda Sales


By John Letzing
EPA
RANCHO PALOS VERDES, Calif. — New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg defended his controversial proposal to prohibit the sale large-sized sugary soda drinks in the city, arguing that it will combat obesity and cut health-care costs.
During an appearance via video link Thursday at the D: All Things Digital conference, Bloomberg said his plan to ban the sale of sodas larger than 16 ounces in restaurants and movie theaters is part of an effort “to encourage people to live longer.”
“This is something we think we have the legal authority to do,” the mayor said. “Obesity is a local problem for us, and that’s why we’ve addressed it.”

FDA Sour on New Name for Corn Syrup






The U.S. Food and Drug Administration rejected a request by corn-refining giants to change the name of the widely used—and controversial—food ingredient "high-fructose corn syrup" to "corn sugar."
The Corn Refiners Association, which has been waging an advertising and public-relations campaign to stem criticism of the ingredient for several years, sought the name change in a petition to the FDA in 2010.
Critics of the sweetener, which is widely used in snack foods, condiments and other products, contend it has played a significant ...













No Equal Pay for Nancy


House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) refused to answer questions about Senate Democrats paying their female staff members less than male staffers on Thursday. She may have ducked the question because a Washington Free Beacon analysis shows she pays the women on her staff $26,606 less per year on average.

DWS: Eye on the Ball

Rep. Wasserman Schultz / AP Democratic National Committee chair Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D., Fla.) had some trouble remembering who she is supporting in the effort to recall Republican Wisconsin governor Scott Walker (R., Wis.).

Dems Divided Over Soaking the Rich

AP President Obama and his Democratic allies agree on one thing: Rich people are giving insufficient quantities of money to the federal government. But they are having trouble agreeing on exactly what constitutes “rich.”

 

Barrett Can’t Back Up Claims

Tom Barrett / AP
Tom Barrett, the Democratic gubernatorial challenger to GOP incumbent Scott Walker, has hammered Walker for cutting public education funding, but was unable to identify any particular Wisconsin schools that have been harmed by Walker’s policies.






First Solar Furlough

First Solar Logo
A politically connected, taxpayer-funded solar firm announced a massive round of furloughs on Friday, just weeks after its chairman told Congress his company was “financially strong.”

No comments: