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    Explore "real estate management" with insightful episodes like "Lots More on How CHIPS Act Money Got Awarded", "This Is How the Trillion Dollar Coin Could End Debt Ceiling Fights for Good", "Ryan Holiday on Opening a Bookstore During a Pandemic", "This Is What Happened When They Tried To Fix Journalism Using Blockchain" and "Why a Natural Gas Company Is Shaking the World of Islamic Finance" from podcasts like ""Odd Lots", "Odd Lots", "Odd Lots", "Odd Lots" and "Odd Lots"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    Lots More on How CHIPS Act Money Got Awarded

    Lots More on How CHIPS Act Money Got Awarded

    In 2022, Congress passed the CHIPS Act, which set aside tens of billions of dollars in loans and grants in order to encourage companies to build new semiconductor fabs in the United States. We're still very early in the process. It's going to be a long time before we know if the US will become a major player again in the production of advanced chips. But the process is well underway and the bulk of the awards have been officially announced, with much of the money going to Intel, Samsung, TSMC, and others. So how did the grants get allocated — and what's next? On this episode of Lots More, we speak with Bloomberg News reporter Mackenzie Hawkins on the latest developments.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    This Is How the Trillion Dollar Coin Could End Debt Ceiling Fights for Good

    This Is How the Trillion Dollar Coin Could End Debt Ceiling Fights for Good

    Every few years, people are reminded of the weird law the United States has: the debt ceiling. Congress has to vote affirmatively to raise the total outstanding legal stock of debt the country can take on. If Congress fails to vote in favor of it, you could see a theoretical debt default, with devastating consequences. Sometimes the vote is routine and easy. Sometimes it's contentious, as it was in 2011. But arguably there's an easy solution that could avoid these fights altogether: A provision in the law which gives the Treasury Secretary the unilateral right to create platinum coins of any denomination. While this sounds like a joke, there's a serious argument that it offers a robust legal path out of the problem. On this episode we speak with Rohan Grey, a professor at Willamette University College of Law and one of the foremost experts on the legality of the coin maneuver, on how it works in practice and in theory.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Ryan Holiday on Opening a Bookstore During a Pandemic

    Ryan Holiday on Opening a Bookstore During a Pandemic

    Bookstores typically aren't seen as the most attractive businesses in the year 2021. Add in the pandemic, and that makes it even tougher. And if you're in Texas, dealing with multiple blackouts, then it gets even harder than that. Our guest on this episode did all of that. We speak with the author Ryan Holiday, the author of several books including The Daily Stoic and Ego Is the Enemy, as well as Conspiracy, a book about the takedown of Gawker. He talks about his new bookshop in Bastrop Texas, and all of the various difficulties he's faced over the last year in running the operation.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    This Is What Happened When They Tried To Fix Journalism Using Blockchain

    This Is What Happened When They Tried To Fix Journalism Using Blockchain

    Back in 2017, during the Bitcoin boom, there were a number of different attempts to use blockchain technology to improve a host of businesses and industries. Many of those were cynical attempts to cash in on the bubble, but some did have loftier ambitions. On this episode of Odd Lots, we speak with Maria Bustillos, who was the co-founder of a project called Civil, which aimed to fund a series of newsrooms, backed by their own Ethereum-based token. Maria talked about what the vision was, why it didn't work, and the lessons learned for journalism business models and new endeavors.

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    Why a Natural Gas Company Is Shaking the World of Islamic Finance

    Why a Natural Gas Company Is Shaking the World of Islamic Finance

    Earlier this month, Dana Gas, a UAE-based company, rocked the world of Islamic finance by announcing that one of its Shariah-compliant bonds was, well, no longer Shariah-compliant. On this week's episode of Odd Lots, we speak to veteran Dubai-based journalist Frank Kane about the rise of Islamic finance (what it is, how it works, why it's grown so fast) and why the Dana Gas announcement is such a big deal.

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.