Popular Articles

Bye bye, brand name
Self-deprecating humour isn’t something one sees too much of in this country (where making fun of others is held a nobler pursuit than laughing at one’s own foibles), so I’m always pleased to read Saad Akhtar’s webcomic Fly, You Fools! (People are Mindless Cattle), a good-natured, witty take on some of the things we read about in the newspapers every day. It isn’t brilliantly written or drawn (in fact, it mostly uses photos and mixed media rather than fresh illustrations) but it’s goofy and perceptive, casting fresh light on (among other things) security checks at mall entrances (http://tinyurl.com/5s25pe), rich kids mowing down pavement-dwellers in their Mercs (http://tinyurl.com/mhpwep), and loud honking at traffic signals as a substitute for sexual inadequacy (http://tinyurl.com/kl7knc).

Uttam Galva hits upper circuit on open offer
The stock price of Uttam Galva Steels today hit the upper circuit on the stock exchange after ArcelorMittal, the largest steel maker in the world, said it would make an open offer to buy an additional 29.4 per cent stake in the company from the public at Rs 120 a share.

News of the day

Sunil Jain: Solving spectrum scarcity
Sunil Jain / New Delhi November 16, 2009, 0:07 IST
Corporate

Apple CEO Steve Jobs takes $1 salary in 2009

Apple Inc Chief Executive Steve Jobs was paid his customary $1 annual salary in 2009, but Apple"s strength through a rough economic climate returned the value of his personal holdings in the company to pre-meltdown levels. - Eight Indian-origin CEOs at big US cos: Forbes - Mukesh Ambani ranked 5th best CEO in the world - 2009: Vulgar salaries "out", austerity "in" - Mukesh Ambani ranked 5th best CEO in the world - BofA appoints Brian Moynihan as President and CEO - Robert Kelly in lead for BofA CEO job, pay a hurdle Jobs does not get a bonus or reimbursement for perks many other CEOs accept, such as personal security, according to a regulatory filing made yesterday. Apple said it reimbursed Jobs $4,000 for company travel on his $90 million Gulfstream V jet, which he received as a bonus in 1999. That"s far less than the $871,000 Apple reimbursed Jobs in 2008. The CEO took nearly six months off in 2009 for medical leave, during which he received a liver transplant. He returned to work at the company"s Cupertino, California, headquarters part-time at the end of June. Jobs, 54, holds 5.5 million shares of Apple"s stock. He has not sold any shares since he rejoined the company in 1997, nor has he been awarded any new equity since 2003. In 2008, the value of Jobs" stake in the company he founded was cut in half as investors worried Apple"s pricey gadgets might not fare well through the US recession. But shares of the maker of iPods, iPhones and Mac computers gained about 42 per cent during the 2009 fiscal year that ended in September, and at the close of trading yesterday, when Apple"s stock reached $202.10, Jobs" holdings were worth about $1.1 billion.


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