DirectoryMix Web Resources » Article Details

David Einhorn Buys Dr Pepper Snapple Group Inc., TERADATA CORP, Covidien Ltd., Sells Discover Financial Services, SAIC ... - Read More

Date Added: August 18, 2008 07:16:02 AM
Greenlight Capital's David Einhorn is a smart guy. He has been shorting financials such as MBIA, Lehman Brothers etc. These are his buys and sells during the second quarter. David Einhorn owns 29 stocks with a total value of $2.6 billion.

Category: Computers & Internet » Industry Information


No comments are posted yet


 
Name:*
Email:*
Website:  (optional)
Comment:*
(html and bb codes are filtered and not allowed)

Do the math:*CAPTCHA - Do The Math
 

Related Articles

South Africa: Standard Bank Computers On the Blink

STANDARD Bank Group, one of the country's big four banks that has about 8-million retail and business clients, had to figuratively close its doors for about three hours yesterday afternoon when software problems prevented branch, internet and credit card

India's IT industry revenues: more than double by 2012

Stock dealers trade shares on computers at a brokerage in Mumbai, in April 2007. India's IT revenues, including those from export markets, will reach 5.3 trillion rupees (132 billion dollars) in 2012, from 2.46 trillion rupees last year, according to the

UPDATED | 11:46 AM

Cellphones, Cameras, Computers and more. At an ad-industry conference Wednesday morning, much of the buzz in the room was about today’s Commerce Committee hearings in Washington, D.C., about online advertising and privacy.

TrustDefender and Credit Union BCU Join Forces to Announce an 'Industry First' in the Fight Against Online Crime

Leading regional credit union, BCU has announced that it will provide the TrustDefender online security solution to all its customers, free of charge and thereby heralding a new era in transacting online.

Democrats Criticize McCain's 'Dial-up Campaign'

>Leading Democrats on Tuesday attacked the Bush administration's broadband policy and the technology track record of GOP presidential hopeful John McCain, while leading tech companies pushed for a more tech-savvy and innovative federal government.