Weekly Roundup JANUARY 14, 2012 The week's top 10 videos on MarketWatchBy MarketWatch Sony unveils LED TV at CES Daisuke Wakabayashi reports from the Consumer electronics Show in Las Vegas that Sony is betting on a new crystal LED television to help jump-start its struggling TV business. Watch Video Report. Newt 2012's anti-Romney ad Watch a campaign ad from Newt 2012 on Mitt Romney's economic plan. Watch Video Report. Best Buy CEO fires back Best Buy Co.'s chief executive, Brian Dunn, shot back Friday at critics who have been calling the retailer a relic, as the electronics giant reported lower December sales compared with the year before. Matt Jarzemsky report. Watch Video Report. A new era in computing "Ultrabook" seems to be the buzzword at this years Consumer Electronics Show but can they keep up with the consumers demand for features like more touch-screen control and greater processing power? Don Clark reports from the 2012 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Watch Video Report. Don't bank on early-January effect A common belief about stock-market patterns is that the first five days of January will point the way for the rest of the year. If only it were that simple, says MarketWatch columnist Mark Hulbert. Laura Mandaro reports. Watch Video Report. Surprise shakeup at Goldman Sachs Liz Rappaport checks in on Mean Street to discuss this week's unexpected shakeup at Goldman Sachs in which half of the executives in charge of the company's securities division plan to leave the company. Watch Video Report. Buffett slams private equity David Weidner discusses Warren Buffet's recent comments bashing the private-equity business. Watch Video Report. Apple CEO was paid $378 million Apple CEO Tim Cook was paid $378 million last year, a sharp contrast to late CEO Steve Jobs, who took a $1 salary. Rolfe Winkler joins Markets Hub to discuss. Watch Video Report. Morgan Stanley's dim view of the 2012 economy Jonathan Cheng has details of the latest 2012 outlook from Morgan Stanley - an outlook that paints a dismal picture for the U.S. economy. Watch Video Report. Iran scientist assassinated in car-bomb blast An Iranian scientist working for a key nuclear site was killed in Tehran with a magnetic bomb attached to his car, in what the government said was a plot by the U.S. and Israel. Farnaz Fassihi has details on The News Hub. Watch Video Report. Get the latest news on our mobile site: http://www.marketwatch.com/m MarketWatch has sent you this newsletter because you signed up to receive it. To ensure you receive this newsletter in the future, please add marketwatchmail.com to your list of approved senders. Sent to: kumaresan.selva.blogger@gmail.com Unsubscribe | Subscribe Copyright 2012 MarketWatch, Inc. All rights reserved. MarketWatch, the MarketWatch logo, and BigCharts are registered trademarks of MarketWatch, Inc. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy (updated 6/26/07). MarketWatch - Attn: Customer Service, 201 California St., San Francisco, CA 94111 |
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Saturday, January 14, 2012
Weekly Roundup: The week's top 10 videos on MarketWatch
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