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(1) Hui Li and Dexter Roberts, Making Billions off China's Worried Parents. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/a ... a-s-worried-parents
 
 Note:
 (a)
 (i) summary underneath the title in print: TAL Education tutors kids for tests that determine a child’s future on the mainland
 (ii) Print and the online version are identical.
 
 (b) "TAL Education Group 北京世纪好未来教育科技有限公司 [ticker symbol NYSE: TAL] * * * TAL’s initials stand for Tomorrow Advancing Life, a none-too-subtle nod to one of the biggest anxieties of middle-class families in the test-based world of Chinese education. Combining in-person coaching and online instruction that lets teachers lecture across the country to multiple classrooms equipped with large video monitors"
 
 (c) "That desire [to ace 高考] has also turned TAL, the nation’s largest tutoring outfit, into a major money spinner."
 (i) money-spinner (n): "British a thing that brings in a profit"
 https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/money-spinner
 (ii) money spinner (n): "a product, business, or idea that makes a lot of money"
 https://dictionary.cambridge.org ... glish/money-spinner
 (iii) The concept is from the noun spinner: "a person who spins textiles."  en.wikipedia.org
 (iv) Its synonym and antonym are money-maker and money-loser, respectively.
 
 (d) "its [the Group's] online and in-person enrollment has been rising at a 49 percent annual clip. It had revenue of $1.72 billion in its fiscal year ended February 2018. By June 12, TAL’s stock had soared 27-fold since its October 2010 initial public offering, giving it a market value of $25 billion. That was more than three times that of London-based Pearson Plc, the world's largest education services company."
 (i) Pearson Plc
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearson_plc
 (was founded by Samuel Pearson in 1844; based in London)
 
 Many textbooks are published by Addison–Wesley and Prentice Hall, imprints of Pearson.
 (ii) The plc stands for public limited company, a limited liability company.
 (iii) Pearson bought Financial Times in 1957 and sold it to Nikkei Inc (publisher of 日本経済新聞) in 2015.
 (e) "Zhang Bangxin 张邦鑫, TAL's co-founder, a 37-year-old former math tutor who’s become one of China's richest people: His TAL shares are worth about $7 billion."
 
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