Wednesday, April 24, 2024 Apr 24, 2024
70° F Dallas, TX
Advertisement
Publications

Invested

A Dallas author spends a year in the life of the most over-caffeinated stock.
|

courtesy of Crown Publishing Group

Karen Blumenthal’s research into her book about Starbucks didn’t get off to a smooth start. The Dallas author, a longtime reporter and editor for the Wall Street Journal, went to Seattle in February 2005 to interview shareholders at Starbucks’ annual meeting. The company granted her media credentials, but that didn’t stop one Starbucks employee with a headset from freaking out when Blumenthal talked to people.

“Media relations!” the employee screamed into her headset. “I need media relations here immediately!”

“She was very aggressive,” says Blumenthal, laughing. “So I ended up in the parking garage, freezing, interviewing people on their way in. I felt sorry for them. They just wanted some free coffee, you know?”Eventually, the company relented. The resulting book, Grande Expectations: A Year in the Life of Starbucks’ Stock, hits stores April 3.

The idea for it was novel. Examine one stock from all sides: the many factors that go into its movement, its trading, its perception by investors and the financial community. Blumenthal got lucky with Starbucks. During the year she covered it (January 2005 to February 2006), the company bought back stock (a chapter in itself) and split its stock (another chapter). She also looks at what really happens to a stock when it is traded. Highly recommended.

Related Articles

Image
Baseball

What Should We Make of the Rangers’ Accidental Youth Movement?

It's been 26 years since a defending World Series champion leaned on this many young players out of the gate. In Texas' case, that wasn't the plan. But that doesn't make an influx of former first-round picks a bad thing, either.
Local News

Leading Off (4/24/24)

Cloudy today with a high of 80 and chances of playoffs-induced sleepiness
Image
Business

Wellness Brand Neora’s Victory May Not Be Good News for Other Multilevel Marketers. Here’s Why

The ruling was the first victory for the multilevel marketing industry against the FTC since the 1970s, but may spell trouble for other direct sales companies.
Advertisement