Edit Metric
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Details
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[edit] Revenue Sources
[edit] Growth Initiatives
[edit] CompetitionShow a comparison of ML to its competitors by revenue and earnings. Also compare along the lines of revenue per FA, and number of FAs and Assets under managment.
[edit] Trends and ForcesDon't use the risk reward framework. Just talk about the trend or force and how it affects ML's business. [edit] NPOVIt seems like the article strays from NPOV at times. Examples include: -- In time it dove into investment banking; but never forgot the premise that the company was based on: an emphasis on client needs, goals, and circumstances when suggesting investments. (this sounds a bit like a sales brochure) -- Over the last 5 years the company has achieved both record revenues and impressive margin expansion - from 12% in 2002 to 31% in 2006. The new meaner-leaner Merrill is a far cry from the bloated giant, that struggled to gain momentum just a few years earlier. (that margin expansion is "impressive" is both not very descriptive and a bit editorialized IMHO). That merrill lynch is "meaner-leaner" and a far cry from the "bloated giant" -- is that something that everyone would universally agree with? It also sounds a bit like a PR guy. I wonder if we could say that the company is leaner than it was before (demonstrably true) while leaving out the "meaner" which I think is more intangible. -- Despite such occasional hardships, investors remain "bullish" on Merrill. THIS is definitely editorialized, and should be removed -- It has grown into a massive and lucrative business that still remains true to Merrill's original credo, "I have no fear of failure, provided I use my heart and head, hands and feet — and work like hell." This doesn't seem to add anything to me and should be removed, I think. Parkerconrad 03:03, 13 June 2007 (PDT) |
The Shelf
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