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News Breaks | | | | December 20, 2012 | | 07:27 EDT |  | TRI | EU regulators drop Thomson Reuters antitrust investigation, Reuters reports EU regulators dropped an antitrust investigation into Thomson Reuters (TRI) after the company made it easier for customers using its financial instrument codes to switch to competing services, reports Reuters. The ruling means the company won't be penalized.Reference Link | |
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News For TRI From The Last 14 Days Check below for free stories on TRI the last two weeks. |
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| June 18, 2013 | | 07:29 EDT |  | TRI | Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association to host a conference
Subscribe for More Information | | | June 13, 2013 | | 05:46 EDT |  | TRI | Traders pay for an early look at key data, WSJ reports Economic reports from public universities, trade groups and other nongovernmental organizations can move markets just as official data from the U.S. government. But unlike government reports, where great pains are taken to make certain no one gets them ahead of time, few rules control release of nongovernmental economic reports. Unknown to many investors, selling early access is routine. It's legal, and so is trading on the advance peeks, reports the Wall Street Journal. Reference Link | | | June 12, 2013 | | 11:44 EDT |  | TRI | Thomson Reuters pays to give data to elite traders first, CNBC reports Thomson Reuters pays the University of Michigan $1M per year for exclusive access to the university's consumer confidence number, and offers the information to an elite group of traders, for a fee, two seconds before its official release, CNBC reports. Many market participants are not aware that some traders get a head start on market-moving data, CNBC adds. Reference Link | | | June 10, 2013 | | 07:11 EDT |  | TRI | National Investor Relations Institute to host conference
Subscribe for More Information | | | June 6, 2013 | | 05:58 EDT |  | TRI | Thomson Reuters acquires, terms not disclosed
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