A little weekend reading...
Compiled by Anthony Demangone, Powered by NAFCU
It has been a great week. Spring has sprung in the D.C. area. The days are getting longer. And I hear the -ping- of batting practice as softball and baseball practices start up in area parks.Â
While I do love all seasons, there just is something special about spring.Â
Now, grab a cup of joe, and settle into this week's reading pile.Â
- Isn't it funny how you often don't hear about good things? America just hit a wonderful educational milestone. (Ritholtz)
- ESPN wants to be more like Netflix. (BI)
- More and more, U.S. productivity is tied to big cities and the energy belt. (The Atlantic)
- Santander pays $26m to settle subprime auto-loan allegations. Â (Boston Globe)
- Chase used to advertise on 400,000 websites. They recently cut it down to 5,000. And noticed no difference. (NYT)
- Here we go again. Citizens Financial Group stock falls on report that bank workers faked bank appointment data. (Bloomberg)
- This is amazing. An artist colorized a number of black and white photos. (BI)
- While people are starting to default on risky auto loans, this isn't necessarily the next housing bubble. (WaPost)
- One Fed official thinks the economy is finally back to normal. (CNN Money)
- In 15 years, millions of people will give up their cars. This could change the basic way cities are structured. (Fast Company)
- 10 sentences that prevent reverse delegation. (Leadership Freak)
- 10 Top CEOs on what is changing in the world of work. (Fortune)
- Scraping by on $500,000 a year. (Financial Samurai)
- To take on Netflix, Hollywood plans to hit back by offering new releases as premium on demand. (WSJ)
Well, that's enough for this week. Have a wonderful weekend, everyone!
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