Former New York Post and Fortune business writer Roddy Boyd writes on The Big Money site about his struggles to produce aggressive business journalism about Overstock.com in the wake of its aggressive tactics to counteract his stories.
“Then there is the push-back. Corporations have everything to lose from bad press: credit-rating downgrades, regulatory investigations, lost business, and, above all, a possibility of stock-price declines. So as often as not, they fight a tooth-and-nail battle with investigative reporters and editors to tone down, delay, or even kill looming bad press. Outside public relations and law firms can turn an extraordinary amount of heat on increasingly over-matched editors and lawyers on the reporter’s side of the fence.
“The most extreme form of this behavior comes from Overstock.com, a Salt Lake City-based Internet retailer that is in the news almost as frequently for the outrageous pronouncements of Patrick Byrne, its founder and chief executive, as it is for selling retailers’ surplus inventories. Byrne is best-known for his quest to eradicate naked short-selling, a violation in which a trader fails to borrow stock adequately prior to selling it short. He believes that a far-reaching conspiracy of reporters, hedge-fund managers, and regulators are in league to abet naked shorting.”
Read more here.
Reuters has named Colleen Jenkins as White House editor. She previously was a 2024 election editor and…
Ian Stevenson has been hired by E&E News to cover energy, including oil and gas and…
Bloomberg News is looking for a creative self-starter who can use data to help make…
Jim Pavia, a senior editor at CNBC, has left to become managing director of communications at…
Russell Sherman of "Press Profiles" interviewed Wall Street Journal mergers and acquisitions reporter Lauren Thomas about how she…
Rebecca Blumenstein, president of editorial at NBC News, sent out the following on Wednesday: All, I…
View Comments
Definitely see the movie "Stock Shock" about short selling the market and the effect it had on Sirius XM stock in particular--short sellers ran it down to 5 cents a share at one point. On DVD only, of course. Amazon has it on DVD or stockshockmovie.com