Birkenstock Adds Rare Default Protection Clause in Bond Deal businessoffashion.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from businessoffashion.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Roy Exum: My Historical Fiction Sunday, April 4, 2021 - by Roy Exum
Roy Exum
One of the best fiction books ever written in my eyes was entitled “The Third Bullet” by the film critic of the Washington Post, Steven Hunter. It was written in 2013 and the hero, former Marine sniper Bob Lee Swagger – a totally fictitious guy – was called in to investigate one of the most enduring controversies of our time - the JFK assassination - in Dallas. The book is so good you can hardly put it down. I’ve read dozens of Hunter’s books – his writing style is influential (!) and while you know what you are reading is baloney, it is a bless-ed escape from reality.
Photo by Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images
We are about a week away from the NBA trade deadline, and you are wondering if the Suns are going to make that one BIG trade that will put them over the top in the West.
As of today, your Suns are 26-12 with the second-best record in the West and third-best in the whole league. But that’s not good enough for you. You want to make them even better, more impervious, able to blow out every team by 20 every single night and not fear any matchup on any team.
But before we try to trade regular rotation players, let’s take a walk down memory lane to see how trade deadlines worked out for the Suns during their six-year playoff run in the SSOL days. That was the last time the Suns were strong playoff participants, so it’s relevant to today’s conversation.
Ahlstrom-Munksjo gets its covenant package over the line ifre.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ifre.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Citi Stupidity Clause Now Standard Feature Of Debt Deals
Never again will a bank have to admit how bad at banking it is in court, at least on this matter.
Author:
Mar 10, 2021
Never again will a bank have to admit how bad at banking it is in court, at least on this matter.
Decades, it seems, can pass between readings of the standard boilerplate inserted into every debt agreement. After all, this language has been honed by the finest transactional lawyers in the world; once they’re perfect, why change them, or even look at them when copying and pasting from the last one to the next one? It’s perfect, airtight, until it is not, because, as it turns out, some hedge fund managers are cleverer than decades’ worth of diligent contract attorneys, and some clients are far, far stupider than those same attorneys could have possibly imagined.