Search Results | Showing 1601 - 1610 of 8613 results for "Lower" |
| | | ... up 12.7%; the Russell 2000 is up 11.6%. While the Dow and the Russell 2000 indices remain 6.3% and 15.6% (respectively) lower than a year ago, the S&P 500 (up 1.6%) and the Nasdaq (up 14.8%) are not losing investors money. What gives? What gives, of ... |
| | | | ... Murray himself repeatedly lobbied for his own remuneration to decrease, but the board decided on several occasions not to lower it. Murray's pay was reduced from $850,000 to $650,000 on 1 March 2020, taking it back to the level the AMP chair was ... |
| | | | ... the firm's full-year 2019 result of $315 million, with $284 million in wealth fees booked this financial year, "due to lower brokerage income as the wealth advice business focused on the high net worth segment". Meanwhile, the firm's assets under ... |
| | | | ... equity and therefore would have a higher recovery in the event of a default. "While that is generally true, the trade-off is lower overall returns and generally worse liquidity which can lead to much higher volatility." Despite this, exchange traded ... |
| | | | ... year and by a whopping 25% in the second quarter before rebounding later this year but still leaving national output 14% lower by the end of 2020. The UK central bank also expects to double from a near 45-year low of 4% (February 2020) to 8% by the end ... |
| | | | ... increased fund merger activity and for industry growth of new accounts to slow as a result of the ERS, low employment growth and lower workforce mobility. Addressing the conference, Link Group managing director John McMurtrie said himself and Link chair ... |
| | | | After ASIC issued a stark warning to people using retail broking services to try their hand at day trading, robo-advice services and financial advisers say this is why financial support needs to be accessible. ASIC observed an average of 4675 new identifiers ... |
| | | | As COVID-19 batters the once celebrated yield-providing banks, investors have turned to corporate bonds in their search for income. Amid the spiraling economic environment, investors have become increasingly aware of the difference between "dividends" ... |
| | | | ... gradually, over 2020, increase its strategic asset allocation to infrastructure and other assets it saw benefiting from lower interest rates. It had made the first part of that change when COVID-19 arrived. It entered the downturn 6% underweight unlisted ... |
| | | | ... better placed than those with active ones, as they automatically sell a higher dollar value of large, liquid companies, and a lower dollar value of small, less liquid companies, when they raise cash, Shead explained. Passive or active, Mao argues any ... |
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