Saturday, January 4, 2025
Tag:

decline

Revenue Decline at TheStreet.com

Between the decline in newspaper performance and the dominance of financial reporting in the news, you would think that online financial publications would be one area that is flourishing in this economic downturn.

Record Labels To Blame For Industry Decline

Physical music sales continued a trend of downward progression and digital revenues are not making up the difference. Within the next two years, total revenues from music sales are projected to dip down to $23 billion, which is half of what the industry brought home a decade earlier.

Federal Web Sites See Decline

The public satisfaction with federal government Web sites dropped from last quarters all time high and stayed relatively unchanged over the last seven quarters. The first quarter 2007 special report on E-Government Satisfaction from the University of Michigan's American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) shows that customer satisfaction with federal Web sites declined 0.7 percent from last quarter to an overall score of 73.4. Even with the drop in satisfaction, e-government faired better than the federal government, which had a score of 72.3 on the ACSI.

First Decline in Consumer Prices In 10 Months

Consumer prices fell for their first time in 10 months in May at 0.1%, while energy prices declined following record highs in the previous months.

News Corp. Remains Confident Despite Profit Decline

Profits fell 8% in the third-quarter for News Corp. even though revenues grew heartily in its cable advertising and film units.

Corn Products International Expects Decline

Corn Products International expects first-quarter diluted earnings per share (EPS) to decline 35 percent to 40 percent from the first quarter of 2004...

Ford Sales Decline From Last Year

U.S. customers purchased or leased 305,172 cars and trucks from Ford, Mercury, Lincoln, Jaguar, Land Rover and Volvo dealers in March whichis the highest monthly total since May 2004.

Consumer Confidence Continues Decline

The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index, which had declined in February, lost more ground in March.