Novell, Dell Face Delisting From NASDAQ
narramissic writes to tell us that Novell has confirmed receiving a delisting notice from the NASDAQ stock exchange, after the software company delayed filing its most recent quarterly report to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Dell is in the same position. Both companies, and others including Apple, are grappling with investigations of the way they issued stock options and — in Dell's case — other accounting irregularities. Both companies are appealing the delisting, which means they won't vanish from the stock exchange anytime soon. NASDAQ rules require listed companies to announce the receipt of a delisting notice.
Let's run the United States right into the ground. And let's do it by making it impossible for businesses to operate here. After all, that's where all the economic power comes from. So we'll do that by creating such a monstrocity of laws and regulations affecting businesses, and the larger and more successful the business, the more cumbersome, expensive, and downright unfair the regulations should be. If it becomes a public company, the pinnacle of achievement for many businesses, then we should turn every financial action of the company into an investigation for accounting irregularities. In the meantime, there should be no tarriffs on imports anymore, and we should encourage companies to outsource, or outright move, to China. And by doing all of the above, we'll successfully run the United States right into the ground.