Minneapolis-based Dolan’s stock has fallen to $0.52 per share, well below the New York Stock Exchange’s listing requirements, and a new executive appointment illustrates continued distress.
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Best Buy and Supervalu were ranked among 10 of the “top-performing” Fortune 500 stocks in 2013; meanwhile, C. H. Robinson and Mosaic were among the 15 “worst-performing” stocks this year.
Wayzata-based food giant Cargill topped Forbes’ list of the largest private companies in the United States; Carlson, Holiday Companies, Schwan Food, Rosen’s Diversified, M. A. Mortenson, and Andersen were also among the 224 companies that made the cut.
In addition to the newly announced offices, Minnesota also has plans for a foreign trade office in Germany and has already established an office in China.
3M, Ameriprise Financial, Ecolab, and UnitedHealth Group appeared on a recent Bloomberg list of 50 U.S. companies that excel in “civic engagement.”
3M and Target both made four of Fortune’s high-profile annual lists, earning them spots on the magazine’s 2013 best-of compilation.
Granite City Food & Brewery said that disclosure costs did not outweigh the benefit of being a reporting public company.
Amid a growing trend of so-called "co-working" spaces in the local market, Cafe, Inc. has ambitious plans for opening multiple Twin Cities locations and then expanding to other cities.
Minnesota’s unemployment rate dropped to 4.8 percent in October, a rate last seen in January 2008; a declining labor force participation rate, however, has contributed to the trend.
Good things can come in all kinds of packages if you keep these key elements in mind.
TCB interviews 28 Minnesota CEOs, Fortune 500 executives, and thought leaders.
The merger of Nash Finch and Spartan Stores created SpartanNash Company, although the former brand names will continue to be used in their respective markets.
Next year, the statewide, entrepreneurial Minnesota Cup competition will include a “food, agriculture, and beverage” category and a total of $300,000 in prize money.
GiveMN.org, the organization behind the 24-hour fundraising event, said a surge in website visitors triggered the technical issues.
The company is projecting 2013 sales of $152 million, about half as much revenue as it reported a few years ago.
ValueVision asked activist investor Clinton Group to postpone a special meeting until after the holidays; Clinton said it would wait until January, but it won't withdraw its filing, because that might allow ValueVision to push the date back even further.