There's a trade where peoplel basically becauseo it cost money to dispose of stuff, especially dangerous stuff. Sometimes the manifest is vague. In the case of the one that i wrote about in the story, it just said, household goods,. And the was what that meants, anybody's gues te woudae wa wat value. It's like a complete n of random gas. The same day i was there, he showed me the car. He had a load of tires that had been illegally shipped off and had been sent back - so he was going to dispose of that. So why would something like that car not get claimed? Like, how? How frequently does stuff just
Red President and COO Jennifer Lotito shares efforts to raise money to support access to COVID-19 relief in honor of Giving Tuesday. Bloomberg News Health Editor John Lauerman shares the latest news on the omicron variant. Bloomberg Businessweek Editor Joel Weber and Businessweek Freelance Contributor Jeff Wise discuss Jeff's Businessweek story about how supply-chain carnage is creating opportunities for companies willing to take a chance on random goods. Bloomberg News Deals Reporter Ed Hammond explains how a secretive robot helps investment firm Stripes pick winners. And We Drive to the Close with Aaron Kennon, CEO at Clear Harbor Asset Management.
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