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" ... Here are a few questions you may have, with some heavily caveated answers. ... "
" ... On Monday Raymond James airline analyst Savanthi Syth issued a surprisingly upbeat report noting that beginning about two weeks ago U.S. carriers started seeing a change in flight booking trends that portend a better second quarter. True, that’s a heavily hedged and caveated way of saying “things might be getting a little better.” But for an industry that posted a record $35 billion loss last year, blew the lid off all previous records for indebtedness, cut its collective employee ranks by more than 100,000 (if you count all those who would have been laid off already if the federal government weren’t directly covering their salaries for the moment), and continues to lose $150 million in cash a day, that’s a pretty positive piece of news. ... "
" ... Schwartz quickly caveated that statement when we met by explaining this gap between the two fields is a false dichotomy. It’s more of a perception problem wherein engineers have not been traditionally viewed as “businesspeople” while most assume that non-technologists lack the ability to engineer the software they sell, analyze, or market. ... "
" ... Similarly, it should be caveated that the mere fact that the IRS is conducting promoter audits doesn't mean that the involved managers will ipso facto see their arrangements invalidated. For all we know, most or all of these managers will go through the audits with flying colors. It is for that very reason that I refuse to name the managers known to be under promoter audits. But I wouldn't put my money on that bet, since the IRS usually doesn't even start a promoter audit (a substantial and resource-draining event for the IRS) unless it already has some evidence that something is rotten in Denmark. ... "
" ... Stephanie Soong Johnston: The numbers are very heavily caveated. How do you estimate how much money two theoretical pillars are going to bring into a government coffer? ... "