[ noun ] report or open letter giving informal or confidential news of interest to a special group <noun.communication>
newsletter \news"let`ter\, news-letter \news"-let`ter\, n. A circular letter, written or printed for the purpose of disseminating news. This was the name given to the earliest English newspapers.
Syn: newssheet.
"The Federal Reserve does not need a new credit crisis," said James Grant in the issue published Friday of his newsletter Grant's Interest Rate Observer.
Steven Axelrod, another New York literary agent, is meeting next week with an investment newsletter writer who has proposed a guide to investing in the stock market.
The national group's newsletter carries a column entitled "Saints of the Closet?" which profiles the lives of saints thought to have been homosexual.
The newsletter said Paget Hinch charged the government $1,410 for a 1987 Thanksgiving trip to the same area.
Yes, a good newsletter is important.
"There are many investment strategies with potential," says Sheldon Jacobs, editor of the No-Load Fund Investor, an industry fund newsletter.
"The lawyers are really doing well over Intel and AMD," said Slater, the newsletter editor.
Kurt Barnard, publisher of the newsletter Retail Marketing Report, said Tuesday that judging by the evidence so far, his prediction of a 5 percent increase in holiday sales this year looks accurate.
As special projects coordinator, she edited the monthly AP People newsletter and Spectrum, an annual communications newsletter, and wrote for AP World magazine.
As special projects coordinator, she edited the monthly AP People newsletter and Spectrum, an annual communications newsletter, and wrote for AP World magazine.
Charles Biderman, editor of the newsletter Market Trim Tabs, says wealthy investors might consider buying hotel properties if some come on the auction block, but he isn't excited about hotel stocks.
Membership is automatic with an $18-a-year newsletter subscription.
But to say instead 'uses a wheelchair', as the newsletter suggested, is unacceptable,' I argued.
That compares with a $2 billion average every week since the beginning of the year, said Susan Cook, editor of the Holliston, Mass., newsletter.
"No one is going to say that we have to turn off the lights," says Cyrus Noe, editor of "Clearing Up," a utility newsletter.
Morningstar Mutual Funds, a Chicago newsletter, calculates that the average international fund has just 21% of its assets in Japan.
The combined company could also "sharply reduce overhead and possibly even buy more advantageously since the same merchandise is often displayed in both stores," said Kurt Barnard of Retail Marketing Report, a newsletter.
"They can celebrate their survival _ that's all they can celebrate," said Pierre Terzian, editor of the Paris-based newsletter Petrostrategies.
For the past two decades he has published a political newsletter and now also publishes a biweekly on business and public-affairs issues.
Jim Milliot, editor of BP Report, a trade newsletter, says Mr. Tash's bid has left many in the publishing world "shaking their heads."
But to say as the newsletter did that this book is `scientifically meaningless' is rather global, and not correct." Calls to Prentice-Hall were not returned.
Mr. Timmerman edits Mednews, a Paris-based newsletter on Middle East defense issues.
The four-page newsletter by the National Council of Field Labor Locals was sent through the Labor Department's internal mail distribution system last Friday to the department's 10 regional offices.
Mr. Gregory, the newsletter editor, said.
In an unprecedented wave of murders, 59 Soviet military officers ranging in rank from lieutenant to general were slain last year, a military affairs newsletter said today.
The index, compiled by Harold W. Gourgues Jr., an Atlanta newsletter publisher, aims to detect the waxing and waning of financial fads by tracking investment ads.
Intrigued by the stock options trading industry, Donahue developed and refined his own theory, which he detailed in a newsletter called Options Strategies that was published from 1974 to 1976.
As a result, more funds with minimal distribution charges likely will eliminate them, says Mr. Jacobs, the newsletter publisher.
The precious metals markets appear to be digesting the recent dismal auto-sales figures and the general state of the economy, said Philip Gotthelf, editor of the Commodity Futures Forecast, a weekly newsletter for traders.
It will co-manage, along with Kidder Peabody, a $50 million bond issue to help finance the management-led leveraged buy-out of Welbilt Corp., according to Corporate Financing Week, a securities industry newsletter.