Search Results | Showing 1 - 10 of 47 results for "devil" |
| | ... these aspects will be included in the new SoA only that they'll be clearer and easier to understand. "As usual, the devil is in the detail," said Khouri. "And I hope that the legislation will be practical and provide us and product providers with ... |
| | | Asset owners must be mindful of increasing regulatory and legislative pressures that will soon sharpen their ability to provide quality and accurate climate disclosure reports, according to an expert. FS Sustainability managing editor Rachel Alembakis ... |
| | | ... the Liberal party's proposed Super Home Buyer Scheme is an interesting proposal, FPA chief executive Sarah Abood said the devil may be in its detail. Helping to demystify the hotly questioned policy, Abood said: "Under this proposal, a share of the member's ... |
| | | The US dollar weakened, so too did the yield on 10-year US Treasuries while the equity market's benchmark indices closed on the up and up as inflation expectations in Uncle Sam's county eased, calming concerns that the US Federal Reserve would ... |
| | | ... Southeast Asia and in Europe." Then again, it could be that China's secretly backing Trump, preferring to deal with the devil they know. |
| | | Industry Super Australia's internal analysis has explored the other side of the superannuation guarantee debate, finding the costs of an increase in mandated savings may be shared between both employers and workers. A piece of internal analysis ... |
| | | Volatility, despite its stomach turning swings, should not be feared; instead investors should take time to understand it to take advantage of the opportunities it presents. That's according to Pengana Capital Group executive director and manager for ... |
| | | ... increase in the participation rate from 65.9% to 66.0% in May. But at the risk of being branded as a broken record, the devil is in the details. Most of the gains in May's total employment were due to part-time jobs (up 39,800 over the month). And ... |
| | | ... so good that the Nikkei-225 index closed 0.9% higher on the day the GDP numbers were released. But is it? As always, the devil is in the details and the details are devilish. Japan's National Accounts show net exports accounted for 0.4 percentage ... |
| | | ... measure to prove your case else, use the year-on-year rate to show continued advancing progress. As is always the case, the devil (or the angel) is in the details. The BEA's contributions to growth table shows that despite slowing in both the annualised ... |
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