1) Buffett’s Costly Mistake
People flock to Omaha, Neb., for Warren
Buffett’s annual shareholder meeting in search of ideas.
The big lesson this year?
Buffett seems frustrated.
The Berkshire Hathaway
Inc. chief executive officer spoke at length about his failure to
pounce on opportunities in tech stocks, the challenge of finding big deals, and
his frustration with a cash pile that’s approaching $100 billion, Noah Buhayar and Katherine
Chiglinsky wrote.
With thousands watching
live (and many more streaming video online), Buffett and Vice Chairman Charles
Munger took questions for five hours.
Buffett said that, in
hindsight, he could have been quicker to understand Google—its founders
consulted him around the time they were taking the company public. “I had
plenty of ways to ask questions, or anything of the sort, and educate myself,”
Buffett said. “But I blew it.”
2) Think Before You Send That
Email
The old warning still
applies: Never put in an email something you wouldn’t want to see on the
internet.
A five-word message to
a rival banker was enough to cost former Citigroup Inc. trader David
Madaras his job, Patrick Gower reported.
Citigroup’s Timothy Gately
disclosed the message on the first day of Madaras’s employment lawsuit in
London Tuesday.
The executive said the
April 2011 chat constituted gross misconduct, and firing Madaras was the only
appropriate sanction. “he’s a seller/fking a,” Madaras wrote to a rival trader
who had just disclosed the identity of a client, Gately said in a filing
prepared ahead of the hearing.
That chatroom message
“validated an external trader’s disclosure of a client name,” Gately said in
the filing.
The lawsuit comes as
the bank seeks to appease regulators probing a foreign-exchange scandal
engulfing the industry.
3) A Trump-Related
Investigation Can Be Bad for Your Career
U.S. President Donald
Trump’s dismissal of FBI Director James Comey on Tuesday was the third time
he’s fired someone involved in an investigation of him or his associates.
The bureau has been
probing Russian involvement in the U.S. election and possible involvement of
Trump associates since the summer.
Earlier, former acting
U.S. Attorney General Sally Yates was dismissed after she refused to defend
Trump’s first travel ban.
And former Manhattan U.S.
Attorney Preet Bharara was initially asked to stay on in his role before being
fired in March.
Our helpful graphic
shows how, in each of these cases, the justification for dismissal was
inconsistent with prior actions, or immediately followed events related to
investigations.
4) Traditional French Politics
Are Over
France rejected the
populism of Marine Le Pen and opted for 39-year-old Emmanuel Macron, who
created his own party for the election.
His victory means the two
parties that have dominated the presidency since 1958 are out of power.
Now comes the hard part: turning his political movement into a vehicle
capable of winning a majority, or at least garnering enough seats in parliament
to govern or form a coalition.
The French will vote again
on June 11 and June 18 to elect their 577 national legislators.
Macron’s lack of an
established base has injected uncertainty into the vote.
5) Stop Ruining Doughnuts
Not long ago, we were the
biggest champions of the doughnut, but now it’s gone too far, Kate Krader and Chris Rovzar wrote.
Flavors that shouldn’t
work but do, such as “Peanut Butter and Yuzu,” are fine.
As is morphing into a
cruller or cronut.
But a spaghetti doughnut is
the latest smash hit at Smorgasburg in Brooklyn, N.Y. Gourdough in Austin
introduced the Drunken Hunk, a doughnut topped with a mound
of bacon-wrapped meatloaf, potato pancake, and candied jalapeños.
Ford Fry in Atlanta
created a fried chicken sandwich with egg whose “bread” is actually
two whole doughnuts.
Stop it. The doughnut is
nearly a perfect thing, as is.
Source: Bloomberg
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