Search Results | Showing 1 - 10 of 21 results for "Flatline" |
| | | The ranks of Australian billionaires have more than doubled over the past decade, accumulating wealth at $137 million per day on average - $95,000 per minute, according to Oxfam Australia. Its acting chief executive Christina Muli described this as ... |
| | | | Robo-adviser Stockspot received a $28 million funding boost from a global fund manager that will see it expand its capabilities in the precarious digital advice landscape. Mirae Asset Global Investments announced its "major strategic investment" in ... |
| | | | While super funds' returns might have recovered, member satisfaction certainly hasn't. In fact, a new report shows it's fallen even further. The latest CSBA FEAL Superannuation CX Benchmarking report found 25% of members who had recently engaged with ... |
| | | | ... act of asset management (the real stewardship of capital allocation) is challenged more than ever as risk-free rates flatline. At the same time, asset managers on the hunt for yield (starved of that yield in government bond markets) are moving to where ... |
| | | | Industry Super Australia has labeled a band of MPs "out of touch", after they called for increases to the super guarantee to be put on ice or scrapped completely. Backbench coalition MPs have called for the legislated increase to the SG to be scrapped ... |
| | | | ... to work from home. On the flipside, he said travel related companies will continue to be impacted as passenger levels flatline. "Qantas and Sydney Airport, given the significant drop in passenger numbers is calling into question whether both companies ... |
| | | | The Corporations Amendment (Life Insurance Remuneration Arrangements) Bill 2016 has lapsed due to prorogation, leaving the future of risk adviser remuneration unclear. The reforms in the bill banning volume-based payments, capping commissions and implementing ... |
| | | | ... fifth straight month of decline. No wonder, the Fed's also contemplating going negative lately. US factory activity could flatline, no probs for it accounts for only a small portion of the economy. Not so for consumers - they make up nearly 70% of US ... |
| | | | Fifteen point zero nine points or just a little over 0.28%. This is all the All Ordinaries index need to slip by today to take it back to square one - where it was at the start of 2014. Given the lead from offshore markets overnight - the S&P 500 dropped ... |
| | | | ... while in Paris the CAC 40 slid 0.74 per cent to 4,174.36 points. London's benchmark FTSE 100 index ended just above the flatline at 6,689.08 points, compared with Thursday's close. "A feeling of complacency had been creeping back into investor psychology ... |
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