Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 10:43 a.m. No.1090915   🗄️.is 🔗kun

CEO of S.Korea's steelmaker POSCO offers to resign

 

SEOUL, April 18 (Reuters) - South Korean steelmaker POSCO said its CEO offered to resign at an emergency board meeting on Wednesday as he is keen for a younger person to lead the firm.

 

Kwon Oh-joon, 69, will stay in his post until the company appoints a new chief, a company spokesman said on Wednesday.

 

Kwon’s term was set to end March 2020 after he was re-appointed as the chief executive of the country’s top steelmaker March last year.

 

https:// www.reuters.com/article/posco-ceo/ceo-of-s-koreas-steelmaker-posco-offers-to-resign-idUSS6N1R4004

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 10:44 a.m. No.1090920   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0955

ADD TO THE LIST

Mark Lamberti resigns as Imperial CEO

 

Imperial Holdings CEO Mark Lamberti has resigned.

 

This follows his resignation from the boards of Eskom and Business Leadership South Africa after a high court ruled against him in a race and gender discrimination case.

 

https:// mg.co.za/article/2018-04-18-mark-lamberti-resigns-as-imperial-ceo

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 10:46 a.m. No.1090936   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0955

SMRT CEO Desmond Kuek stepping down; to be replaced by another ex-Chief of Defence Force

 

Mainstream media publications reported early this morning that SMRT CEO Desmond Kuek is stepping down from his post after nearly six years. Another former chief of defence force, Neo Kian Hong, has been tipped to be Kuek’s successor and it has been reported that the 54-year-old who currently serves permanent secretary for defence development may take over Kuek’s post in August 2018.

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 10:47 a.m. No.1090946   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0955 >>0983 >>1530

Dr Natasha Cica resigns as Heide CEO

 

Cica’s resignation as CEO and Director of Heide Museum of Modern Art was quietly announced on Tuesday.

 

The CEO and Director of Heide Museum of Modern Art, Dr Natasha Cica, has resigned after one year in the role.

 

The news of her departure from Heide was announced in a post on the Museum’s website by Chairman Steven M Skala AO.

 

[she was probably laundering art money]

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 10:49 a.m. No.1090956   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1003

Ogilvy One CEO Jo Coombs to depart agency in May

 

Jo Coombs, the chief executive of Ogilvy One UK, has announced she will resign from the post and the group mid-May.

 

The Drum understands Coombs will remain in the industry and reveal her next moves in June.

 

She departs amid a period of change at the company: the group is currently unifying all its sub-brands into Ogilvy UK.

 

The transformation is being led by UK chief executive Michael Frohlich, who replaced Annette King in February. Meanwhile the chief executive of Ogilvy PR, Marshall Manson, announced he was departing to join Brunswick in October 2017.

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 10:51 a.m. No.1090973   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0996

AG Hawley: Greitens committed ‘potentially criminal acts’ involving veterans charity

 

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.—Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley announced Tuesday that his office has uncovered potential criminal wrongdoing by Gov. Eric Greitens, a fellow Republican, and has turned that evidence over to the St. Louis prosecutor.

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 11:15 a.m. No.1091207   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1212 >>1215

>>1091164

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

 

his look at 37 seconds in, is the look of "i'm fucked" you can also see his breath being held once they start reading it to him.

 

I love our POTUS

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 11:17 a.m. No.1091224   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1091215

and the fact that he looked frozen at 37 seconds, looks over to the lady reading at 38 seconds and then puts his head down..he's guilty as all hell.

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 11:22 a.m. No.1091280   🗄️.is 🔗kun

'Russian Elon Musk' raped and tortured to death in custody, say experts

Entrepreneur Valery Pshenichny had been accused of embezzling 100m rubles (£1.1m) and told to prepare for his coffin

 

A broken spine, signs of electric torture, asphyxiation, knife wounds and rape – these were just a few of the grim and unexpected findings of an official medical report into the death of a Russian inventor in pretrial custody.

 

Valery Pshenichny, 56, was jailed in January after being accused of embezzling 100m rubles (£1.1m) in a defence contract to develop 3D submarine models. Just three weeks later, his body was found hanging from an improvised lace noose in his St Petersburg prison cell.

 

Prison authorities initially insisted it was suicide, but friends of the businessman sensed something was up. Perhaps he had been driven to a heart attack, they suggested, and then denied treatment. The “strong” and “clear headed” inventor was not an obvious candidate to take his own life. His wife also wondered how a lace appeared inside the prison from a hoodie she couldn’t remember.

 

Surprisingly, authorities have agreed foul play was involved, and have signalled a dramatic departure in their investigation by reportedly collecting DNA samples from prison guards.

 

The apparent brutality of Pshenichny’s case has already brought comparisons with another Russian prison scandal, the death of lawyer Sergei Magnitsky in November 2009. The lawyer had called out a massive VAT ruse conducted by tax officials but was instead imprisoned for his troubles. He died in pretrial custody in excruciating pain after being deliberately and repeatedly denied medical treatment.

 

Magnitsky’s boss, the exiled billionaire Bill Browder, has since accused a number of high ranking officials in the Russian government of being directly responsible for his death.

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 11:24 a.m. No.1091299   🗄️.is 🔗kun

IS THE POUND CRASHING?

 

Pound sterling plummets as UK inflation slows to less than economists predicted

The value of the pound retreated to $1.4176 – down 0.76 per cent on the day

 

Sterling has fallen three quarters of a percent against the dollar in the wake of official data showing a surprise fall in inflation.

 

The value of the pound retreated to $1.4176 – down 0.76 per cent on the day – in the wake of the ONS’s report earlier on Wednesday that inflation in March was just 2.5 per cent, below the 2.7 per cent estimate of City of London analysts.

 

Against the euro the pound was off 0.67 per cent on the day at €1.1470.

 

Traders had been expecting the Bank of England to hike interest rates again to 0.75 per cent next month, following the first increase in a decade last November.

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 11:26 a.m. No.1091315   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Business News

IMF sounds alarm over $164 trillion global debt pile

In its latest Fiscal Monitor, the Fund estimates that global debt now stands at 225 per cent of GDP, up from its previous peak of 213 per cent in 2009

 

The International Monetary Fund has returned to its warnings about global debt, highlighting in its latest report that leverage across the planet is now higher than it was before the global financial crisis.

 

In its latest Fiscal Monitor, the Fund estimates that global debt now stands at $164 trillion, equivalent to 225 per cent of GDP, up from a previous peak of 213 per cent in 2009.

Anonymous ID: 7229a0 April 18, 2018, 11:27 a.m. No.1091327   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Lloyds Banking group to cut 305 jobs and close 49 branches across UK

Lender recently reported highest annual profit in over a decade

 

Lloyds Banking Group has said it is cutting a further 305 jobs as part of its plans to axe 49 branches across the UK.

 

The company said it was cutting a total of 1,230 roles, but would then create 925 jobs throughout the business. The group first revealed the branch closures last year, but at the time announced plans to cut fewer than 100 jobs.