Table of Contents:VOL. 156, NO. 6 - September 17, 2007 COVER STORY: THE LUXURY ISSUE
Luxury goods have grown into a $220-billion-a-year industry. In the following stories, Fortune takes a look at the companies and the people behind the boom. (more)
Going global and upscale while creating a new in-house brand for J.C. Penney, Ralph Lauren wants to sell all things to all people. (more)
A new crop of investing vehicles focuses on the conspicuous-consumption sector. (more)
Can the world's most exclusive brands cater to both the top and the bottom and still keep their cachet? (more)
Looking to freshen its dated brand, Brooks Brothers reaches out to 21st-century designer Thom Browne. (more)
Robert Duffy is a merchandiser, a corporate infighter, and the man standing between a famous designer and his demons. (more)
The men and women who personify the business of style. A Fortune portfolio. Photographs by Ben Baker; words by Eugenia Levenson (more) FORTUNE'S FASTEST-GROWING COMPANIES
We combed the ranks of fastest-growing companies to find those recent highfliers poised to continue soaring. By Yuval Rosenberg and Eugenia Levenson (more)
This year's list of America's supercharged performers. (more) FEATURES
A former Silicon Valley exec turned Pentagon boss wants to put Iraq back to work. But his plan to restart the country's state-owned factories has run into roadblocks. (more)
Feckless borrowers, goofy lenders, myopic regulators - it took a cast of characters worthy of Dr. Seuss to create the mortgage mess. By Peter Eavis (more)
On Oct. 19, 1987, the Dow fell 22%. Ten veterans share their memories of what it was like and the lessons they learned. By Corey Hajim and Jia Lynn Yang (more)
Legendary media investor Alan Patricof has found new life in the Big Apple's web startup scene. (more)
How do you sell $76 billion of consumer goods? One brand at a time. Procter & Gamble's chief marketing officer, Jim Stengel, talks with Geoff Colvin. (more) FIRST
A string of high-profile exits. The rumored illness of his daughter. How long can Ned Johnson avoid publicly addressing the fund giant's future? (more)
The beleaguered auto workers' union is making a major effort to organize the nation's casino dealers. (more)
The Wall Street bond titan and BlackRock CEO calls the current liquidity crisis 'much worse' than the one that roiled markets in 1998. He speaks with Fortune's Peter Eavis about the credit crunch. (more)
Where do business titans Rupert Murdoch, Carl Icahn, and James Kilts regularly go for a trim? (more) DISPATCHES
Greg Stemm's company found the richest trove of sunken treasure ever. Now comes the hard part: Keeping it. (more) COLUMNS
Don't believe the hype: The deficit is much bigger than you think. (more)
Consumer content is driving the Internet's future. (more)
Government gets off easy in Bill Clinton's new book about giving. (more)
The Ogilvy & Mather CEO responds to readers' queries. (more) INVESTING
Some people are losing their homes - and some their marriages. (more)
By Jeremy Grantham, Fortune Prices of stocks, bonds, and real estate have a long way to fall. (more)
Many stocks were bruised in the recent market tumble; we found ripe choices with bright prospects. By Corey Hajim (more) | |
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