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Bayer 2023 jaardraadje

475 Posts
Pagina: «« 1 ... 11 12 13 14 15 ... 24 »» | Laatste | Omlaag ↓
  1. forum rang 6 effegenoeg 8 november 2023 11:16
    Bayer schrapt managementbanen na miljardenverlies
    LEVERKUSEN (ANP/AFP/BLOOMBERG) - Het Duitse chemieconcern Bayer schrapt banen in het management en wil zijn takken voor bestrijdingsmiddelen of geneesmiddelen mogelijk afsplitsen, meldt het concern. Bayer leed afgelopen kwartaal een verlies van bijna 4,6 miljard euro, onder andere door grote afschrijvingen op zijn landbouwproducten.

    Het concern wil tegen het einde van dit jaar een aantal lagen in het management en de coördinatie schrappen. Dat leidt volgens Bayer tot "een significante vermindering van het personeelsbestand". Het is niet duidelijk om hoeveel banen het gaat. "95 procent van de besluitvorming zal verschuiven van managers naar de mensen die het werk doen", lichtte topman Bill Anderson toe.

    In totaal werken wereldwijd meer dan 101.000 mensen bij Bayer. Het concern is actief in 83 landen, waaronder Nederland. Bayer is onder andere bekend van zijn bestrijdingsmiddel Roundup, dat het omstreden bestanddeel glyfosaat bevat.
  2. forum rang 6 effegenoeg 10 november 2023 13:25
    quote:

    4finance schreef op 9 november 2023 11:13:

    [...]

    Ik blijft ook zitten. Vanmorgen 2500 aandelen AMG terug gekocht rond de €16,85 ;-)
    BAYER gaat ook wel weer omhoog.
    Vandaag nog zien of de veertig gaat houden.
    Overigens lijkt me die 16,85 AMG van lang gelé
    Maar je was schijnbaar vroeg wakker.
  3. forum rang 7 4finance 10 november 2023 13:54
    quote:

    effegenoeg schreef op 10 november 2023 13:25:

    [...]

    Vandaag nog zien of de veertig gaat houden.
    Overigens lijkt me die 16,85 AMG van lang gelé
    Maar je was schijnbaar vroeg wakker.
    Nee hoor, gisteren aan het begin van de dump AMG op deze prijs gekocht.
    BAYER mag van mij wel naar de 38,50. Dan koop ik nog een deel terug.
  4. forum rang 6 N audio 13 november 2023 16:44
    Op de usa notering zit men blijkbaar flink short. De shortvolume's daarvan waren vandaag torenhoog.
    Terwijl de trend vwb short interest op 31/10 juist dalend is. Maar goed, dat blijven momentopnames.
    Bil Anderson lijkt zich inmiddels te roeren binnen Bayer. Als ik het goed heb gelezen, geen opsplitsing van de 3 hoofdtakken? Gelukkig.

    Mijn planning hier is om plaats van twee, nog maar één keer bij te kopen. Het andere budget heb ik al voor de helft richting AMG gestuurd. Hier bij Bayer ga ik nog wat geduld oefenen, vóór ik nog 1x bijkoop. Het moet eerst nog maar eens wat lager.
    Geen haast.
  5. forum rang 7 4finance 13 november 2023 18:09
    quote:

    N audio schreef op 13 november 2023 16:44:

    Op de usa notering zit men blijkbaar flink short. De shortvolume's daarvan waren vandaag torenhoog.
    Terwijl de trend vwb short interest op 31/10 juist dalend is. Maar goed, dat blijven momentopnames.
    Bil Anderson lijkt zich inmiddels te roeren binnen Bayer. Als ik het goed heb gelezen, geen opsplitsing van de 3 hoofdtakken? Gelukkig.

    Mijn planning hier is om plaats van twee, nog maar één keer bij te kopen. Het andere budget heb ik al voor de helft richting AMG gestuurd. Hier bij Bayer ga ik nog wat geduld oefenen, vóór ik nog 1x bijkoop. Het moet eerst nog maar eens wat lager.
    Geen haast.
    Ook mijn visie en situatie ;-)
    Heb ook fors in AMG geïnvesteerd.
  6. Shlomo 16 november 2023 15:53
    Hier wat positief nieuws over Bayer producent van dit product:

    Omstreden onkruidbestrijder glyfosaat mag toch nog tien jaar worden gebruikt
    Het omstreden onkruidbestrijdingsmiddel glyfosaat wordt voor nog eens tien jaar toegelaten in de Europese Unie. Dat is de uitkomst van een nieuwe stemmingsronde donderdag in Brussel over de omstreden onkruidverdelger.
  7. forum rang 7 wiegveld 18 november 2023 22:10
    Business
    Monsanto Ordered to Pay $1.5 Billion in Roundup Case
    One of largest trial losses in five-year Roundup litigation
    Three ex-users blamed Roundup for their non-Hodgkins lymphomas

    Bayer Keeps Roundup Faith After Losing Second Trial on Cancer
    Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

    By Jef Feeley
    18 november 2023 at 17:17 CET
    Updated on 18 november 2023 at 19:54 CET

    Listen
    4:23
    Bayer AG’s Monsanto unit was ordered by a Missouri jury to pay more than $1.5 billion to three former users of its Roundup weedkiller who blamed their cancers on the controversial product in one of its largest trial losses in the five-year litigation over the herbicide.

    Jurors in state court in Jefferson City, Missouri, late Friday awarded James Draeger, Valorie Gunther and Dan Anderson a total of $61.1 million in actual damages and $500 million each in punitive damages over their claims that years of using Roundup on their lawns and gardens caused their non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas.

    Monsanto has been hit with a recent spate of jury verdicts finding its Roundup contains carcinogens after winning nine cases against it. The more than $1.5 billion verdict is one of the largest damage awards handed down against a US corporate defendant this year. A federal-court jury in Kansas City concluded Oct. 31 the National Association of Realtors and others conspired to artificially inflate commissions paid to real-estate agents across the US and must pay at least $1.78 billion in damages — a figure that could balloon to more than $5 billion.

    Bayer officials said Saturday they believe US judges have allowed former Roundup users to mis-characterize regulatory decisions governing the product’s safety before juries, and that led to the recent round of plaintiffs’ wins. “We have strong arguments to get the recent unfounded verdicts overturned,” a company spokesman said in an emailed statement.

    Bayer also noted in the statement the US Environmental Protection Agency continues to find Roundup and its main ingredient, glyphosate, as safe and a federal appeals court recently backed a rejection of calls for Bayer to include safety warnings on the product’s distinctive white bottles. The company agreed to transition from the version of Roundup containing glyphosate to new active weed-killing ingredients in the US consumer market by the end of the year.

    It’s likely the jury award to Draeger, Gunther and Anderson will be slashed on post-trial motion or appeal under US Supreme Court rulings that limit such punishment awards to ten times a plaintiff’s actual damages. The punitive award in the Missouri case is about 25 times more than the damages awarded for medical expenses and pain and suffering.

    The Missouri verdict isn’t the biggest in the five-year litigation over Roundup. In 2019, a California jury awarded a couple more than $2 billion in damages after they claimed they got cancer from using the weedkiller for 30 years. That award later was cut to $87 million and allowed to stand by the US Supreme Court.

    Two years ago, Bayer set aside as much as $16 billion to resolve more than 100,000 cases over Roundup, which it acquired when it bought Monsanto in 2018 for $63 billion. The conglomerate now faces a second wave of lawsuits alleging glyphosate and other elements of the herbicide are carcinogens. It lost a bid in 2022 to have the US Supreme Court hear arguments that all Roundup suits should be barred from going forward on procedural grounds.

    “These are the kinds of verdicts Bayer can look forward to in future trials,” Jay Utley, a Dallas-based lawyer for the three ex-Roundup users, said Saturday in an interview. “Monsanto has done wrong for so many years in selling Roundup that it’s a beautiful thing to have a jury recognize that wrongdoing and punish them for it.”

    Formers users contend in the Roundup cases that Monsanto officials knew some researchers had found glyphosate to be a carcinogen and the company sought to bury those studies. Internal Monsanto documents made public during the litigation also showed company officials ghost-wrote scientific studies backing glyphosate’s safety.

    Bayer Chief Executive Officer Bill Anderson has been reviewing the German company’s strategy and structure since taking over the helm in June. The Texas native has said nothing is off the table as he seeks to win back the faith of investors and navigate the company out of a thicket of challenges.

    Anderson’s room for maneuverability could be constrained if the company’s US legal problems — which also include litigation around other legacy Monsanto products, such as toxic PCBs — flare up again with more high-profile trial losses. The company is facing more trials in state courts in Arkansas and Delaware in coming months.

    The Missouri case brought together claims of former users who lived across the US. Draeger and his wife, a landscaper, used Roundup on their home gardens in Mississippi and in commercial jobs, Utley said. Anderson, a San Diego resident, and Gunther, from New York, used it to kill weeds in their yards.

    The case is Anderson v. Monsanto, Case No. 22AC-CC00968, Missouri Circuit Court for Cole County (Jefferson City).

    — With assistance from Tim Loh

    (Updates with company comment starting in fourth paragraph. An earlier version was corrected to clarify the superlative of loss in the deck headline.)
  8. forum rang 6 Krentenmenten 18 november 2023 23:18
    quote:

    wiegveld schreef op 18 november 2023 22:10:

    Business
    Monsanto Ordered to Pay $1.5 Billion in Roundup Case
    One of largest trial losses in five-year Roundup litigation
    Three ex-users blamed Roundup for their non-Hodgkins lymphomas

    Bayer Keeps Roundup Faith After Losing Second Trial on Cancer
    Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

    By Jef Feeley
    18 november 2023 at 17:17 CET
    Updated on 18 november 2023 at 19:54 CET

    Listen
    4:23
    Bayer AG’s Monsanto unit was ordered by a Missouri jury to pay more than $1.5 billion to three former users of its Roundup weedkiller who blamed their cancers on the controversial product in one of its largest trial losses in the five-year litigation over the herbicide.

    Jurors in state court in Jefferson City, Missouri, late Friday awarded James Draeger, Valorie Gunther and Dan Anderson a total of $61.1 million in actual damages and $500 million each in punitive damages over their claims that years of using Roundup on their lawns and gardens caused their non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas.

    Monsanto has been hit with a recent spate of jury verdicts finding its Roundup contains carcinogens after winning nine cases against it. The more than $1.5 billion verdict is one of the largest damage awards handed down against a US corporate defendant this year. A federal-court jury in Kansas City concluded Oct. 31 the National Association of Realtors and others conspired to artificially inflate commissions paid to real-estate agents across the US and must pay at least $1.78 billion in damages — a figure that could balloon to more than $5 billion.

    Bayer officials said Saturday they believe US judges have allowed former Roundup users to mis-characterize regulatory decisions governing the product’s safety before juries, and that led to the recent round of plaintiffs’ wins. “We have strong arguments to get the recent unfounded verdicts overturned,” a company spokesman said in an emailed statement.

    Bayer also noted in the statement the US Environmental Protection Agency continues to find Roundup and its main ingredient, glyphosate, as safe and a federal appeals court recently backed a rejection of calls for Bayer to include safety warnings on the product’s distinctive white bottles. The company agreed to transition from the version of Roundup containing glyphosate to new active weed-killing ingredients in the US consumer market by the end of the year.

    It’s likely the jury award to Draeger, Gunther and Anderson will be slashed on post-trial motion or appeal under US Supreme Court rulings that limit such punishment awards to ten times a plaintiff’s actual damages. The punitive award in the Missouri case is about 25 times more than the damages awarded for medical expenses and pain and suffering.

    The Missouri verdict isn’t the biggest in the five-year litigation over Roundup. In 2019, a California jury awarded a couple more than $2 billion in damages after they claimed they got cancer from using the weedkiller for 30 years. That award later was cut to $87 million and allowed to stand by the US Supreme Court.

    Two years ago, Bayer set aside as much as $16 billion to resolve more than 100,000 cases over Roundup, which it acquired when it bought Monsanto in 2018 for $63 billion. The conglomerate now faces a second wave of lawsuits alleging glyphosate and other elements of the herbicide are carcinogens. It lost a bid in 2022 to have the US Supreme Court hear arguments that all Roundup suits should be barred from going forward on procedural grounds.

    “These are the kinds of verdicts Bayer can look forward to in future trials,” Jay Utley, a Dallas-based lawyer for the three ex-Roundup users, said Saturday in an interview. “Monsanto has done wrong for so many years in selling Roundup that it’s a beautiful thing to have a jury recognize that wrongdoing and punish them for it.”

    Formers users contend in the Roundup cases that Monsanto officials knew some researchers had found glyphosate to be a carcinogen and the company sought to bury those studies. Internal Monsanto documents made public during the litigation also showed company officials ghost-wrote scientific studies backing glyphosate’s safety.

    Bayer Chief Executive Officer Bill Anderson has been reviewing the German company’s strategy and structure since taking over the helm in June. The Texas native has said nothing is off the table as he seeks to win back the faith of investors and navigate the company out of a thicket of challenges.

    Anderson’s room for maneuverability could be constrained if the company’s US legal problems — which also include litigation around other legacy Monsanto products, such as toxic PCBs — flare up again with more high-profile trial losses. The company is facing more trials in state courts in Arkansas and Delaware in coming months.

    The Missouri case brought together claims of former users who lived across the US. Draeger and his wife, a landscaper, used Roundup on their home gardens in Mississippi and in commercial jobs, Utley said. Anderson, a San Diego resident, and Gunther, from New York, used it to kill weeds in their yards.

    The case is Anderson v. Monsanto, Case No. 22AC-CC00968, Missouri Circuit Court for Cole County (Jefferson City).

    — With assistance from Tim Loh

    (Updates with company comment starting in fourth paragraph. An earlier version was corrected to clarify the superlative of loss in the deck headline.)
    blijft wonderlijk….. roken mag nog steeds, terwijl het super schadelijk is…. Het is maar net, waar de belangen liggen…..
  9. forum rang 7 wiegveld 19 november 2023 10:03
    Dat is waar, toch zie je bij roken nog enig beleid waar mensen zich steeds blauwer betalen voor hun verslaving.
    Bij de bestrijdingsmiddelen wordt steeds meer zichtbaar dat er sprake is van neurologische risico’s als Parkinson op jongere leeftijd, zie ook de kankerverhalen rond Tata steel.

    Hier is het vooral door mij geplaatst omdat Bayer wederom moet dokken voor de aankoop van Monsanto.
475 Posts
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