Index Spotlights Where Home Prices are Rising the Fastest
Dallas, Denver, Houston, Miami Appear Prone to Market Downturn
BOCA RATON, Fla., June 04, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) Home prices are escalating quickly in Dallas and a handful of other U.S. cities where consumers would be better off financially by renting and reinvesting the money they would otherwise have spent on homeownership.
That’s the takeaway from first-quarter figures in the Beracha, Hardin & Johnson Buy vs. Rent Index, a national housing barometer created by professors at Florida Atlantic University and Florida International University. The index analyzes 23 U.S. metropolitan markets and determines whether consumers will create wealth faster by buying a home and building equity or renting a similar property and investing their savings in a portfolio of stocks and bonds.
Financial Times Scraps 2021 Executive Education Ranking
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Financial Times Scraps 2021 Executive Education Ranking
The Financial Times Executive Education Ranking has been replaced by directories listing many of 2021’s best executive education programs. Find out why and which b-schools feature in the list
The Financial Times (FT) has decided to temporarily halt its annual Executive Education ranking for 2021.
In its place, the FT has published two directories of open-enrolment and custom executive education programs. These two directories collecting information on over 100 schools include data on the number of programs offered, the number of students enrolled, average tuition cost, among other criteria.
The FT explains the reasons behind the decision: twin factors of disruption to data collection, and the mounting pressure that schools are up against, both as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Current with Matt Galloway
Big brands take aim at state of Georgiaâs new voting laws; Stuart McLeanâs Vinyl Cafe: Tree of Heaven; teaching the regent honeyeater how to sing; and bringing Harry Hibbsâs accordion home to Newfoundland
Play Episode1:14:29
Critics say new voting laws in the U.S. state of Georgia will make it more difficult for Black people to cast a ballot â and some big corporate brands are joining the condemnation. We talk to Carol Anderson, professor of African American Studies at Emory University in Atlanta, Amna Kirmani, a marketing professor at the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland, and Paul Sergius Koku, a marketing professor at Florida Atlantic University s College of Business.
Reconsider renting: Housing index shows buying costs in Dallas-Fort Worth decline bizjournals.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bizjournals.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
FAU Study: CPA Discipline Motivated by Political Regime Uneven Enforcement Erodes Public Trust, Researcher Says
March 04, 2021 09:49 ET | Source: Florida Atlantic University College of Business Florida Atlantic University College of Business Boca Raton, Florida, UNITED STATES
BOCA RATON Fla., March 04, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) The severity of state sanctions handed out to certified public accountants (CPAs) is influenced by political regime, a practice with potentially dire consequences for companies and their shareholders, according to a study by a research team that includes professors at Florida Atlantic University.
The study, published in the
Journal of Business Ethics, revealed that state Boards of Accountability (BOA) respond less aggressively to federal disciplinary actions from the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (PCAOB) when Republicans control a state rather than Democrats.