8 Burst results for "Ed Morrison"

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ed morrison" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"The commodities front WTI crude oil. It's steady, it's just under $75 per barrel gold. It's a little bit higher, just under $1790 an ounce of Bitcoin steady, just under $17,000 per token. Let's get some more color on the pre market equity trading we do that with Bloomberg markets, senior markets, editor, Michael Regan, who comes into the studio right on time. I mean, no wasting time for you just right on cue. Buzzer beater. Exactly. Got right here, yes. Excuse me, if I'm out of breath. But let's start with Apple. Those shares down as much as 1%. This really this drum beat of concern about slowing demand for that iPhone 14 today it's after Murata electronics, which is a key supplier said it expects orders from Apple to drop further in coming months due to weak demand and that kind of has the whole chip complex down a little bit Nvidia, AMD, lamb research, micron, they're all down about 1% to one and a half percent. Big drop in MTB bank shares are down about 5%. This is after KBW cut its recommendation on that stock. Paul also some weakness in Tesla stocks down about 2.5% pre market. Companies offering further incentives to Chinese customers who buy and take delivery of new cars this month. It's sort of the latest move to boost sales in China where the demand seems to be weakening a little bit for Tesla vehicles. Also, on the upside, we have oil trying to rebound a little bit today. Tentative rebound for sure, but we are seeing some strength in the major energy companies. Occidental Petroleum ConocoPhillips schlumberger all up about 1% Paul. Yeah, I'm looking at gasoline though. That's my thing. My unleaded daily national average gasoline price that's the Paul Sweeney personal. It's $3 and 35 cents a gallon to fill up the surveillance Bentley Tom. I mean, I look at it and I haven't seen John Tucker this happy. In like four years. I mean, the Hummer, the H two has got finely. I know. You know, the children were unfit. They were. It's a big deal. We talked to Ed Morrison, Francisco blanche in the last couple of days, and it's just stunning. I mean, you and I know this is the toughest sign that predict. Yeah. So good stuff. All right, how are we going? Thank you so much. Greatly appreciate it. Bloomberg surveillance this morning. Brought you by cone Resnick advisory assurance tax visit con Resnick's C suite dashboard to get the insight and intelligence you need to stay ahead visit con Resnick dot com slash C suite. Paul it was like 10% chance he joined us this morning. I know. I mean, the heartbreak that Aaron judge will not go to the Boston Red Sox. I mean, I just mentioned Lisa emery Horton is out of control. And so we need some Red Sox love. So we go to Atlanta in the graves in Joe Matthews with us here on an election that was in Georgia. What's a distinction of what you learned last night, Joe Matthew, not so much in sound from the Secretary of State, but what did you just learn about the results of this election? That people are often more motivated than we can tell by polling and asking people what's going on around here to think that a million more than a million people came out to vote yesterday after nearly 2 million people voted early. This was not a race that decided the balance of power in the Senate. And it's fascinating to me that they ginned up enough energy over the last four months to set records once again. Not to be inflammatory, but let's go there. Could the Republicans have won with another candidate? Well, that's the question this morning. A lot of Republicans would answer yes. Those who are angry, those who are pointing fingers at Donald Trump, those who didn't love the idea of Herschel Walker to begin with. They look back at the last two months of scandal. And just wacky moments on the campaign trail talking about werewolves and vampires and just not connecting with people in a way that someone like Raphael Warnock would, and by the way, Republicans would tell you as well that while Warnock looks like a star today, he had his own deficiencies and he could have been beaten with a strong Republican candidate not endorsed by Donald Trump, remembering Republicans won every other statewide race in Georgia. How come this was the outlier? That's the question they need to answer. So Joe, you're on the ground in Atlanta. I'd love to get your sense of kind of what, I don't know the Republicans there are thinking about 2024. Are they trying to is there some extrapolations they're trying to make? Maybe even for the Democrats as well. And it starts with embracing early voting. You know, this is something that Republicans saw coming, a lot of them were complaining about this concern about this ahead of the election when Donald Trump says, you know, that it's fraudulent when Kerry Lake says there's only election day, not election week or election month. That's got to end. Because this could have been a different result as well. If Republicans had been motivated to get out early and been part of that 2 million with less of a hole to climb out of yesterday from Herschel Walker, I think the other big takeaway is what are we going to do with Donald Trump here? And while this may look and feel differently, once there's a real race, once Joe Biden likely announces at the beginning of the year, my goodness, this is the excuse. It's this race, the losses in the midterm elections, and the recent comments about revoking portions of the constitution that could be

Jazzed About Work
"ed morrison" Discussed on Jazzed About Work
"The 32 Appalachian counties taking part this year. And that annual cohort experience has been a way for us to reach folks well outside the Athens radius. And provide them an opportunity to get to know one another, network together and to hopefully level up their leadership. So leading an Appalachian is probably one of the primary focal points we have. We're doing some work with nonprofits in the region, different smaller nonprofits, the work that I think that really resonates the most with me right now is probably our work with the Ohio suicide prevention foundation, where we're working, we've been doing it for two or three years now. We're working with suicide prevention coalitions, which are really volunteers, but working with the suicide prevention coalitions throughout Appalachian Ohio and throughout Ohio really writ large. To help build their leadership capacities because they're stepping up to do something that really has purpose and impact. And that's to reduce suicides here in the state of Ohio. So that's been really fulfilling work. I've been doing some team coaching and development with smaller organizations and we're now kind of shifting over to something called strategic doing. And strategic doing is an agile leadership approach, doctor Ed Morrison, who actually whose brother hunter worked with senator bueno witch when senator buoyed was mayor of Cleveland. Doctor Morrison has pioneered strategic doing this basically. How do you bring disparate groups or people together to work on common solutions for wicked problems that confront everyone? And it's just suited for the Appalachian region of Ohio. So we're really looking to bring strategic doing into the region to bring folks together to bring leaders in Appalachia together to help solve some of the things that we've confronted in the region, you mentioned some things, economic development, healthcare, getting our kids educated, getting broadband to the region. Those are some of the things that they're tackling. And then finally, I'd say the thing that excites me is we've introduced professional coaching, leadership and executive coaching into the academy. And that has been a couple of different ways that I'll probably talk about it a little bit later. That's a tall order, but that's kind of what we've been up to or what I've been up to as an executive in residence for the academy and Appalachia here for the last two and a half years. I think sometimes people don't realize how broad a university's activities can be. And Ohio university just is doing so many things in the region I know. But let's get back to coaching because I want to particularly hit on that. And I know you wear more than one hat and you're doing some coaching too. And you and I have had the chance to kind of talk about it because we're both so excited about the impact of coaching can have not just in the individuals which is certainly what I focused on when I started coaching years ago, but on what it can do to an organization. So I want to get into that. But how did you, with all of your leadership experience, how did you start focusing in on executive coaching or leadership coaching as an important part of promoting strong leadership? Why do they come together in your mind coaching and leadership? Yeah, that's a great question, bev and for folks who are listening and may have heard of about coaching and they're not sure what it is. I think I would be one of those folks. I was in that boat. I'd heard about executive coaches. Thought I knew what they were, but like many at the time didn't fully understand it. And I think that journey that leadership journey that I painted a little bit ago, my coaching evolution has been kind of enmeshed in that. And where we come from, you know, maybe a leadership style in the military that was predominantly commanding. This is the way we're going to do things to one that's much more inviting where we get folks to help them face their own challenges and come up with their own solutions. So I would say I first, I first became interested in executive coaching when one of our general officers had executive coaching. And I wasn't proving to all of what went on behind the scenes, but I saw this amazing transformation in his leadership style. He was a very, if general George Patton had survived into the 90s and 2000s. This is what this man reminded me of. And he got some feedback, I think, probably through a 360 evaluation and invest realizing he could do better. He could level his ownership up and he was a general. And he worked with an executive coach. He invested in his own development. And we saw I saw an amazing transformation in his leadership style. The man became a wonderful mentor to me and that was my first kind of aha light that this coaching stuff really might work. I'd say I probably didn't know what it was still. I finally got interested in understood better what executive coaching was when I got a coach. Dear friend of mine taught you had served in the army with me back in the 90s and he to this day runs a very successful executive coaching practice and I came to him towards the end of my military career with just, hey, thought I don't know what I want to do. I've got to retire soon. And Todd coached me, led me through a personality assessment. Let me kind of get better awareness of what my own strengths, talents, and interests were and help me really align to where I wanted to be. And most of our short here I am, just where Todd said, you know, hey, this is what this is what it sounds like. What do you think? I think a lot of us do what you did. That is we get interested in coaching because we've had it. Situation where we saw the impact on somebody else. I was in a similar situation. I was working as a senior leader in a corporation, not at the very top, but pretty close. And my CEO was, I think, ordered to have coaching is just not because he was doing badly, but because board of directors said, this is what we do now. You have to have a coach. And I can see how he was more directive when I first knew him, but when time went on, he had, I'd maybe take three recommendations to him. And say, these are the ups and downs. What do you think? And he would always say, that's why you get the big bucks. You tell me. You decide. And that was a big change. At first I didn't think he meant it. But I saw how the.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ed morrison" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Ad council Influential conversations from Bloomberg television Here's Danny burger Joining us now is Carol knuckle founder and chief executive officer of crystal energy which provides consultancy services and research to government investment funds and energy companies So you hear there from Ed Morrison a 10% jump in oil if there's an escalation of the military kind in Russia and Ukraine do you agree Carol Look I mean we're all engaging here some kind of guesswork because we need to find a definition of what a military action within day is it going to be a small in person to both President Biden or is it going to be a fully fledged war How long was it going to last what to be short later It's what the drug owned forever So each of these scenarios will have different implications on the economy on energy market and Ukraine and both in Russia one of the biggest oil exporters in the world and a Gaza would export us as well Then that would translate to even higher energy costs there are supply disruptions What have you for questions on economic growth Negative repercussions and then in the longer term also repercussions on all demands So it really depends on whether we're talking about any media reaction Yes we want to see spikes and prices but if you look further down ahead depending on the extent of the crisis and depend on how long that will take we might see actually the opposite impact on prices Here more conversations like this one on Bloomberg television streaming live on Bloomberg dot com and on the Bloomberg mobile app or check your local cable listings Markets headlines and breaking news 24 hours a day At Bloomberg dot com the Bloomberg business out and at Bloomberg quick take This is a Bloomberg business flash And I'm Karen Moscow and futures this morning are falling S&P futures down 21 points down futures down 138 and NASDAQ futures down 93 the ten year treasury of 9 30 seconds the Yale 2.01%.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"ed morrison" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Than half of enterprises think they need a complete supply chain revamp They're fed up with massive hits to revenue profits and reputation Thinking the same can help Hundreds of Fortune 500 and global 2000 enterprises count on GE software to transform their supply chains for greater agility and resilience with complete visibility and better control GE software strategy managed services influential conversations from Bloomberg television Here's Danny burger Joining us now is Carol knuckle founder and chief executive officer of crystal energy which provides consultancy services and research to government investment funds and energy companies So you hear there from Ed Morrison a 10% jump in oil if there's an escalation of the military kind in Russia and Ukraine do you agree Carol I mean we're all engaging here some kind of guesswork because we need to find a definition of what a military action within day is it going to be a small incursion to both President Biden or is it going to be a fully fledged war How long was it going to last but to be short later it's not a drive on forever So each of these scenarios will have different implications on the economy on energy market and Ukraine and building Russia one of the biggest oil exporters in the world and a gas would export us as well Then that would translate to even higher energy costs there are supply disruptions Would have a percussion on economic growth negative repercussions and then in the longer term also a percussion on all demands So it really depends on whether we're talking about an immediate reaction yes before the C spikes and prices but if you look further down ahead depending on the extent of the crisis and depend on how long that will take we might see actually the opposite impact on prices.

990 The Answer
"ed morrison" Discussed on 990 The Answer
"So I do think that spirits coming up college football is back and covered has not kept fans from flooding the stadium. It is so gratifying to see so many people live their lives. The final segment of the town All review with New York when we return This is Ed Morrison hot air dot com for town hall Ever since the last airplane left the airport in Kabul, the White House has tried to change the subject from Afghanistan. With Americans, green card holders and Afghan allies abandoned by Joe Biden and trapped behind Taliban lines, The administration has labored to shift attention to anything else. Joe Biden school in Texas over its abortion law, the White House offered updates on the infrastructure debate, and the media has dutifully stopped reporting on the hundreds or thousands still needing risk. You. That hasn't fooled most Americans who are disgusted by Biden's actions. And it's not even convincing. Fellow Democrats Senator Richard Blumenthal of Progressive Democrat declared himself furious over Biden's delay and inaction in helping Americans get out of Afghanistan. We cannot leave them behind, Blumenthal declared, at a moment when the White House is trying to pretend they don't exist. Blumenthal surprising rebuke sets a Red line for Biden No one will move past his despicable abandonment of our citizens and allies. Until they all get out. Perhaps national media outlets should demonstrate as much fortitude as Blumenthal. A Christian school education for your child is priceless. This is Carol Healy from Philadelphia's Am 9 90 the answer. I've been talking with many of you, your families and your friends over the years.

990 The Answer
"ed morrison" Discussed on 990 The Answer
"Up. So I do think that spirit coming up college football is back and covered has not kept fans from flooding the stadium. It is so gratifying to see so many people live their lives. The final segment of the town All review with New York when we return This is Ed Morrison hot air dot com for town hall Ever since the last airplane left the airport in Kabul, the White House has tried to change the subject from Afghanistan. With Americans, green card holders and Afghan allies abandoned by Joe Biden and trapped behind Taliban lines, The administration has labored to shift attention to anything else. Joe Biden school in Texas over its abortion law, the White House offered updates on the infrastructure debate, and the media has dutifully stopped reporting on the hundreds or thousands Still needing rescue that hasn't full Most Americans who are disgusted by Biden's actions, and it's not even convincing. Fellow Democrats Senator Richard Blumenthal, a progressive Democrat, declared himself furious over Biden's delay and inaction in helping Americans get out of Afghanistan. We cannot leave them behind, Blumenthal declared, at a moment when the White House is trying to pretend they don't exist. Blumenthal surprising rebuke sets a Red line for Biden No one will move past his despicable abandonment of our citizens and allies until they all get out. Perhaps national media outlets should demonstrate as much fortitude as Blumenthal. Welcome. I love the army. You just have this brotherhood that you can't find anywhere else Since coming home from war. I've tried so many different things..

990 The Answer
"ed morrison" Discussed on 990 The Answer
"Of like drug they're holding, you know, heads or something. But the day after nine ordered American in this country that wasn't willing to stand up, So I do think that spirits kept coming up. College football is back and covered has not kept fans from flooding the stadium. It is so gratifying to see so many people live their lives. The final segment of the town All review with New York when we return. This is Ed Morrison hot air dot com for town Hall ever Since the last airplane left the airport in Kabul. The White House has tried to change the subject from Afghanistan. With Americans, green card holders and Afghan allies abandoned by Joe Biden and trapped behind Taliban lines. The administration has labored to shift attention to anything else. Joe Biden school in Texas over its abortion law, the White House offered updates on the infrastructure debate. And the media has dutifully stopped reporting on the hundreds or thousands still needing rescue That hasn't fooled most Americans who are disgusted by Biden's actions, and it's not even convincing, fellow Democrats said. Richard Blumenthal, Progressive Democrat, declared himself furious over Biden's delay and inaction in helping Americans get out of Afghanistan. We cannot leave them behind, Blumenthal declared, at a moment when the White House is trying to pretend they don't exist. Blumenthal surprising rebuke sets a Red line for Biden No one will move past his despicable abandonment of our citizens and allies until they all get out. Perhaps national media outlets should demonstrate as much fortitude as Blumenthal. You did it. You woke up today you even got out of bed. You deserve her award. We can't all be morning.

How I Built This
"So what are the guiding principles of creativity is that some of you very best ideas. Come out of sheer frustration products like honest tea or cliff bar olders dyson these all came about because their founders couldn't find the beverages or energy bars or shoes or or vacuum cleaners that they wanted so they invented them but in the case of Tristan Walker. I think it's safe to say that he didn't just start from a place of mild frustration. He actually started from a place of being fed up even angry because for most of his life he had felt completely league ignored totally overlooked whenever he walked into the shaving. I'll drugstore virtually all the big shaving brands were making products that worked well on men with relatively straight hair but tristen couldn't find a high quality razor that worked on his curly facial hair without leaving razor bumps olivarez neck Kajol line and he knew that like him many African American men were dealing with the exact same problem so he decided to design bevill a shaving system with a simple single blade razor that was easy on his face and he wanted everything about the product to look and feel great not like the dusty boxes of shaving products for African American men that we seem to be on the bottom shelves at the drugstore and his ambition to build a black owned and led consumer Marand as big as Johnson Johnson or proctor and gamble but of course when I tried to raise money from all those VC firms on sand hill road in Silicon Valley and he got a lot of knows but eventually he was able to launch his company with a razor some shaving cream but of oil and brush and over the past five years his brand has grown to include more than thirty specialized hair and beauty products for men and women which are now sold and lots of big retailers lers across the country a few weeks ago. Tristan sat down to tell me how he did it in front of a live audience at the Lincoln Theater in Washington. DC tristen Walker Central. I'll take it so let's start. Let's start at the beginning. Tell me about about out your childhood knew you grew up in Queens where I like to describe. It is a bit of the Rosa grew from concrete story. I grew up in Queens New York projects. It's Welfare Bouts of homelessness that sort of stuff right and I realized very early at one goal in life and as as wealthy as possible as quickly as possible Salaam. I realized three ways to do it. I was to be an actor athlete that didn't work second second was to work on Wall Street that didn't work in the last entrepreneurship and then thank goodness. I came to that realization. We were a little boy. A A your dad died. He was killed killed and you grew up with an older brother and your mom. What did your mom do yet for work so oh my mom worked three jobs mainly New York City Housing Authority Administrative Assistant? She spent some time working for Time Warner Cable and she did some retail all at the same time within seven days. I don't know how she did it. She did it. Thank goodness for her. It was not easy but she persevered and as a result of I think her perseverance good fortune beam I graduate college in my family and she she really in what what do you remember about like your neighborhood growing up as a kid I mean would did you do. Did you add in do much because I couldn't do much like my father was killed. When I was three years old? I don't remember too much about him other than the fact that he was killed when I was three years old which is a little bit telling to Kinda type of environment that I did grow up in so you know I lived probably the first six seven years of my life live in Jamaica Queens New York forty projects in the time I turned around seven years old. We moved to flushing Queens. Another project can development and it was much of the same right. My mother was like you're going to be the one you're not gonNa go through this stuff very disciplined. Stay home. Get Your studies and you're not going outside. When I snuck snuck outside? She caught me. I got in a lot of trouble but that was really kind of my life right. Get to school get home. Do you work repeat and you know that discipline actually Kinda got me to wearing them. Now school easy for you has a kid yeah. I was a good student because the discipline that was inspired me I always excelled right. I tended to be at least up until high school anyway at or near the top of my class you know and I kinda slow down when I say that stuff because by the time I got to high school. I realized I didn't even know what a verb was right. I wouldn't do this entire time. All the way up until my high school years doing really really well at the top of my class not even knowing what verb now and that sort of thing was as a teenager you ended up going to this really elite private boarding school hotchkiss in Connecticut the way I like to describe posh kisses is the first time I got to see how the other half lived. I went to school literally rockefellers Ford's right and I learned a couple of things first name mattered to being wealthy wasn't same as being rich and the last and probably the most important was I can compete with each and every one of them while while while I didn't know Oh what a verb was I learned and by the end of my four years they're you know on a roll like that. Sort of thing you know is then absolutely just wonderful experience for me but transformative in a little bit different from how I grew up was it was the transition for you when you got there because you were like fourteen years old. I've been living away from home since I was thirteen fourteen years old and were the first few months at hard for you. academically we get to the school and I realize I don't even have a computer and you know all of my other classmates had computers that sort of thing and I went to leave as the English professor who is my adviser at the time and I remember he took me to this basement. We're all used textbooks are and then he was old compaq like Presidio L. Computer that we had the like hall out and take it to my room so academically. It was very tough because I wasn't equipped with the tools to compete but over the years accelerating so you fish you go to Stony Brook University New York to study economics. Most most students don't necessarily know what they're gonNa do but did you have a sense of what you want to pursue their and what you thought you would do after I mean I was always thinking about the after I wanted to get wealthy yeah I was pretty singular in that help very singular in that hope and overtime that's kind of morphed and changed and the things that are important Ed Morrison changed but I knew I was very very very focused on how to get there and Wall Street was the next greatest option. All this silicon valley stuff at new idea about my world was New England so you're thinking do this degree and I'll go into finance plows e- economics is the closest degree we had at Stony Brook again to Wall Street Okay and in between my first and second year of university I got an internship and Lehman Brothers back office halfway through I I said I want to try some of this front office stuff so I left that enjoined trading desk at the time just observing so when you graduate so you you went actually went to work for Leman and then as a traitor and then everything and eventually JP Morgan in that time at that time time period. Did you still think this is what I should be doing. This is my sort of path to the worst years of my life. This is two thousand and five when I joined the company and as a traitor. Your job is to make money