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  2. Wells Fargo cross-selling scandal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wells_Fargo_cross-selling...

    Wells Fargo's sales culture and cross-selling strategy, and their impact on customers, were documented by the Wall Street Journal as early as 2011. [5] In 2013, a Los Angeles Times investigation revealed intense pressure on bank managers and individual bankers to produce sales against extremely aggressive and even mathematically impossible [7] quotas. [8]

  3. Wirecard scandal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wirecard_scandal

    The Wirecard scandal (German: Wirecard-Skandal) was a series of corrupt business practices and fraudulent financial reporting that led to the insolvency of Wirecard, a payment processor and financial services provider, headquartered in Munich, Germany. The company was part of the DAX index. They offered customers electronic payment transaction ...

  4. List of corporate collapses and scandals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_corporate...

    It went public in 1865, but was badly affected by a general fall in stock prices. The Bank of England refused to advance money, and it collapsed. The directors were sued, but exonerated from fraud. Friedrich Krupp: Germany: 1873: Steel, metals: Krupp's business over-expanded, and had to take a 30m Mark loan from the Preußische Bank, the Bank ...

  5. US sues TikTok over 'massive-scale' privacy violations of ...

    www.aol.com/news/doj-faces-friday-deadline...

    Reuters in 2020 first reported the FTC and Justice Department were looking into allegations the popular social media app failed to live up to a 2019 agreement aimed at protecting children's privacy.

  6. Business career of Donald Trump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_career_of_Donald...

    Trump's stock portfolio was valued somewhere between $33.4 million and $87.9 million in 2015 and was invested in many sectors, including public companies such as tobacco distributors, retail outlets, pharmaceutical companies, industrial manufacturing companies, financial conglomerates, oil companies, high technology firms and defense ...

  7. Colorado legally requires businesses to accept cash — but ...

    www.aol.com/finance/colorado-legally-requires...

    But Dyke knew that Colorado had put through legislation in 2021 that a business must accept cash, in response to many establishments becoming cashless during the COVID-19 pandemic.

  8. Financial Reporting Council - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Financial_Reporting_Council

    Financial Reporting Council. The Financial Reporting Council (FRC) is an independent regulator in the UK and Ireland based in London Wall in the City of London, responsible for regulating auditors, accountants and actuaries, and setting the UK's Corporate Governance and Stewardship Codes. The FRC seeks to promote transparency and integrity in ...

  9. Big Four accounting firms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Four_accounting_firms

    None of the "firms" within the Big Four is actually a single firm; rather, they are professional services networks.Each is a network of firms, owned and managed independently, which have entered into agreements with the other member firms in the network to share a common name, brand, intellectual property, and quality standards.