пятница, 24 июля 2015 г.

uBanks Run Free Classes For Rich Kids On How To Be Super-Richr


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  • Being a young adult who will inherit billions of dollars isn’t all fabulous parties, designer clothes, and supercars. It also means learning responsibility: at minimum, you’ll be responsible for caring for your own billions, and you could also end up running the family business or a foundation. There’s no degree, not even in business administration, that can prepare you for life as a billionaire, but some banks would really like to help.

    Banks? Yes, banks all over the world have classes like these for young scions of the .01%, because even growing up with wealth and a good education doesn’t necessarily mean that you know how to, say, invest your money responsibly so you’ll have billions to leave to your own children.

    Banks, of course, would really like to hold on to the business of the world’s wealthiest families, and one thing that might help with that is offering classes that are relevant to their actual lives.

    For example, a Bloomberg reporter sat in one one of Citibank’s classes, about investing in the art market. Sure, art is a thing that you hang on your wall, but it’s also a long-term investment…if you choose well. Students had an imaginary $100,000 to spend at an imaginary auction of real artworks that had sold recently.

    They chose poorly, spending most of the fake money on a tapestry of model Kate Moss, but one hopes that they learned some important things that they’ll remember when buying artworks for their own mansions one day.



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uSalmonella Outbreak Linked To Recalled Tuna Sickens 62 People In 11 Statesr


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  • At least 62 people in 11 states have become infected in the year’s latest Salmonella outbreak, this one concerning recently recalled frozen raw tuna widely used by restaurants and grocery stores serving sushi.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported this week that 11 of the 62 people infected in the now widespread outbreak have been hospitalized.

    The illnesses linked to this particular strain of Salmonella occurred between March 5 and July 7 of this year. Affected consumers ranged in age from a few months old to 83.

    Additional cases of infection may be likely, as the CDC says it takes an average of two to four weeks between when a person gets sick to when the agency receives information about the illness.

    So far, the illnesses have been reported in Arizona, California, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, New Mexico, South Dakota, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin.

    According to the CDC, most of the people who have become ill from the outbreak strain of Salmonella reported eating sushi made with raw tuna in the days before coming sick.

    Earlier this week, California-Based Osamu Corporation voluntarily recalled two different kinds of tuna shipped from an Indonesia-Based processing plant after a sample was discovered to be contaminated with Salmonella bacteria.

    The recall covers all frozen tuna and one lot of frozen yellowfin tuna chunk meat under the AFC label sold to restaurants and grocery stores throughout the U.S. between May 9, 2014 and July 9, 2015.

    Only two of the reported illnesses have been tied to the single lot of tuna chunk meat under the AFC label. The connection to that specific tuna was made after the Minnesota Department of Health and Department of Agriculture isolated the outbreak strain from samples of unopened frozen raw tuna collected from a Minnesota grocery store where an ill person in this outbreak reported eating tuna sushi.

    The company tells NJ.com that they don’t believe customers were able to purchase the product directly. Rather, the meat was sold in bulk to the stores and restaurants for preparation in their sushi meals, which were then sold to consumers.

    ucm455630The tuna in question can be identified by four-digit purchase order numbers 8563 through 8599 located on each product carton box.

    While some people have no symptoms from Salmonella infections, others will typically have fever and abdominal distress for four to seven days, but children, the elderly, and people with compromised immune systems can become more seriously ill and should seek medical attention.

    Multistate Outbreak of Salmonella Paratyphi B variant L(+) tartrate(+) Infections Linked to Frozen Raw Tuna [CDC]
    Restaurant sushi recalled over Salmonella fears [NJ.com]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uWalmart Selling Car Seat That Alerts Parents When A Child Is Left Behindr


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  • Every summer, we can’t help but wonder why there aren’t more product solutions to the disturbing, but all too familiar, incidents involving children left behind in hot cars, often resulting in death. There’s at least one new product on the market this season that uses technology to alert parents before they accidentally leave their child in the vehicle, a car seat that’s now being sold online by Walmart.

    The Evenflo Advanced SensorSafe Embrace infant seat uses a wireless receiver that plugs into a car’s on board diagnostic port, and syncs with a chest clip that goes around the baby (other companies’ products rely on Bluetooth or cellular technology, Evenflo points out).

    Once the car turns off, if the chest clip is still buckled, a series of tones will ring out and alert the driver.

    The product sells for $149.88 and is only being sold online now — though as of Friday morning, it appeared that all of the new Evenflo car seats with the hot car alert system are out of stock on Walmart.com. It’ll hit Walmart store shelves next month.

    The company says it’s the only alert system that’s been crash-tested by Evenflo and will be exclusive to Walmart.

    “There are millions of cars in our parking lots every day and we put a challenge out to the industry,” said Diana Marshall, vice president for baby at Walmart told the New York Post. “Evenflo stepped up with a first-of its kind product aimed at vehicular heat stroke.”

    On average, 38 children die in hot cars each year from heat-related deaths after being trapped inside vehicles, according to KidsAndCars.org.

    Just this week, strangers prevented a potential hot car death in Kansas, when the manager of a shoe store and others bashed open a car window to free a crying toddler locked inside.

    And if you need a reminder of what it’s like for a child to be trapped in a hot car, there’s always this video of a father filming himself inside a vehicle with temperatures soaring.



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uComcast Reportedly Looking To Buy Vice Media, Or Maybe BuzzFeed, Or Maybe Vox…r


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  • Now that Comcast is done crying itself to sleep every night about its forced breakup with merger partner Time Warner Cable, the company is getting back to doing what it does best: No, not providing adequate cable/Internet service (don’t be silly!), but acquiring other businesses.

    The Wall Street Journal reports that Comcast’s NBCUniversal division is looking around at, and having some chats with, a handful of new(ish) media ventures about maybe becoming part of the Kabletown team.

    Among those the company has talked to are Vice Media, BuzzFeed, and Business Insider. NBCUniversal already owns about 14% of Vox Media and may up its investment in the company.

    The idea appears to be to acquire the online media resources that younger consumers are increasingly choosing over traditional TV. These properties’ websites have large, varied readerships, giving any buyer a built-in audience to market to and data-mine. Some, most notably Vice, have existing TV presences.

    Vice would likely be the most difficult acquisition, as a handful of other major media companies — like 21st Century Fox, A+E Networks, and Time Warner — already invested in the multimedia brand.

    It’s possible, notes the Journal, that Vice could actually end up buying one of NBCUniversal’s many cable channels and turning it into a Vice-branded property.

    Comcast does face the risk of being lured in by the temptation of paying for something new and different that may, in the long run, not pay off.

    “Several of the potential targets on its list are fast-growing but unprofitable and could run into systemic issues of their own, such as pressures in the online advertising marketplace,” explains the Journal. “And it is unclear how the buccaneer-style culture at many of these new media outfits would fare inside a relatively conservative conglomerate like Comcast.”



ribbi
  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist


uAnthem Buying Cigna For $54B In Yet Another Mega Insurance Mergerr


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  • (Anthem)

    (Anthem)

    What a difference a month makes: Just a few weeks ago, Cigna rejected Anthem as a suitor, citing things like the major data breach the company suffered earlier this year and turning down its $47 billion merger bid. It seems Anthem has been busy a-courtin’, as the company announced this morning that it’s reached a deal to buy Cigna for $54 billion, effectively creating an insurance giant.

    It’s the latest move by insurers looking to carve out a big chunk of the market for themselves through mergers — Aetna has also been in the buying mood lately, snapping up rival Humana early in July. Cigna had flirting with Humana for a bit as well, before rekindling talks with Anthem.

    Now, Anthem says it’s buying Cigna in a deal worth $54 billion (including debt) that will create the nation’s largest health insurer by enrollment, with about 53 million U.S. patients falling under that umbrella, reports the Associated Press.

    If the deal goes through, health care in the United States will be transformed, with five of the biggest health insurance companies morphing into just three, including UnitedHealth Group. The mergers come at a time when insurers are figuring out the national health care overhaul under the Affordable Care Act.

    Mergers are good for these companies because larger insurers can hold more sway and negotiating power when settling on rates with care providers. But because what’s good for for-profit companies isn’t always good for consumers, these two mega deals still need to pass muster with antitrust regulators, to make sure that the insurers don’t grow so big that they can dominate the market.

    Consumers won’t feel any effects from the mergers for at least a year, as companies have already set most of their plans for coverage that begins in January. Mergers could lead to fewer choices and some price changes for consumers, of course, which will depend on where they live and which companies already offer plans in their market.

    The Wall Street Journal pointed out earlier in July when Aetna announced its merger with Humana that antitrust regulators were ready to look closely at any combinations among the biggest health insurers. According to WSJ analysis, the Aetna-Humana merger will increase the number of U.S. counties where at least 75% of Medicare Advantage customers are in the hands of a single insurer by about 180.

    Anthem’s merger with Cigna will mean the company has a much broader base over which to spread costs and expenses, a point the company focused on in its first bid for Cigna in June. It’ll also allow it to make technology investments over the industry’s biggest customer pool.

    At this point the deal is slated to close in the second half of 2016; Cigna stockholders have to approve the agreement first, and Anthem shareholders will have to approve the issuance of shares in the transaction: Cigna stockholders will receive $103.40 per share in cash and 0.5152 shares of Anthem stock for each of their shares.

    Cigna’s President and CEO David Cordani will serve as president and chief operation officer of the new combined business, while Anthem’s Joseph Swedish will be chairman and CEO.

    “We are very pleased to announce an agreement that will deliver meaningful value to consumers and shareholders through expanded provider collaboration, enhanced affordability and cost of care management capabilities, and superior innovations that deliver a high quality health care experience for consumers,” Swedish said in a statement. “We believe that this transaction will allow us to enhance our competitive position and be better positioned to apply the insights and access of a broad network and dedicated local presence to the health care challenges of the increasingly diverse markets, membership, and communities we serve.”

    Anthem bids $48 billion for rival Cigna to create insurance giant [Chicago Tribune]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uCouple Says They Ordered A McDonald’s Double Cheeseburger, Got A Rag Insteadr


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  • An Illinois couple claim they received this rag instead of a burger from a local McDonald's restaurant.

    An Illinois couple claim they received this rag instead of a burger from a local McDonald’s restaurant.

    When placing an order at a fast food restaurant it is, unfortunately, not entirely uncommon to receive the wrong – but still edible – item. However, one Illinois couple visiting McDonald’s this week says that was not the case.

    The pair tell ABC7 WLS in Chicago that the double cheeseburger they ordered at a local McDonald’s restaurant turned out to be a wet rag instead.

    The couple ordered their meal from the drive-thru at the Golden Arches and headed home to eat. After unwrapping the not-so-delicious meal, they called the restaurant.

    “He just says, ‘Come in, I’ll give you another McDouble.’ Well, you know, that’s not the point,” the woman recalls. “I got a rag, no apology, no nothing.”

    The manager of the restaurant – who did eventually apologize to the couple – tells WLS that he is taking the matter seriously and currently looking into the claim.

    Elk Grove Village McDonald’s Served Rag In A Burger Wrapper, Couple Says [ABC7 WLS]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uOn Going Power Outage At LaGuardia Airport Delays Some Flights Three Hoursr


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  • While a planned strike earlier this week by contracted baggage handlers and security workers was canceled, saving travelers from experiencing travel disruptions at two of New York’s airports, those passengers coming in and out of LaGuardia faced an interruption of their own on Friday morning when a terminal in the airport lost power. 

    CNBC reports that a power outage was reported at about 6 a.m. Friday causing delays of up to three hours for many flights arriving at the airport.

    “Due to current power outages affecting airlines operating in Terminal C, Parking Lots 4 and 5, flight disruptions may result,” LaGuardia Airport said in a notification to passengers. “Please check with your airline to determine if your flight is affected.”

    The airport did not immediately provide information on what caused the power outage or how long it might last.

    This is the fourth time in recent months that flights have been delayed because of issues with power or technology. Last week, Spirit Airlines suffered a computer glitch at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago, before that United Airlines grounded all flights from taking off for about an hour because of automation issues.

    Power outage at LaGuardia Airport causes 3-hour delays [CNBC]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist