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By Joyce Hanson, AdvisorOne |
May 8, 2013
U.S. investors are well acquainted with market uncertainty and the wobbly economic recovery, but they’ve got nothing on worried investors elsewhere in the world.
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By Michael S. Fischer |
February 15, 2013
What financial experts told the ultra-wealthy members of Tiger 21: The Dow has been on a tear, but don’t relax. There’s still a lot to worry about.
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By Gil Weinreich, AdvisorOne |
February 14, 2013
Printing money is not inflationary, say the inflation hawks at Rob Arnett’s Research Affiliates. But no, the firm is not suddenly going all wobbly on the Fed’s quantitative easing policy.
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By Gil Weinreich, AdvisorOne |
November 19, 2012
Unless the U.S. makes politically difficult changes in immigration, employment and investment policies, Americans should expect a long-term “new normal” rate of growth of just 1%, says investment management firm Research Affiliates.
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By John Sullivan, AdvisorOne |
October 24, 2012
A majority of economists believe Bernanke will continue with the latest round of quantitative easing through end of his term.
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By John Sullivan, AdvisorOne |
October 10, 2012
Economic gadfly and president and CEO of Euro Pacific Capital comes out strong in response to the IMF’s latest report on the global economy.
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By John Sullivan, AdvisorOne |
August 2, 2012
The co-CIO of PIMCO said Draghi should have offered concrete policy steps at Thursday’s ECB policy meeting.
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By Ronald Delegge, ETFguide.com |
March 26, 2012
As 2012 develops, one unchanged investment trend is the continued expansion of the ETF universe.
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By Alexei Bayer |
March 26, 2012
When the financial system faces a major bankruptcy, one that is large enough to threaten its health, it often makes sense to buy time. Regulators, central bankers, multilateral lenders and governments.
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By Gil Weinreich, AdvisorOne |
March 1, 2012
The ECB’s liquidity lifeline to banks—like America’s QE policy—offers a chance to avoid a deeper economic depression, but only if that window of opportunity is used to make sustained structural reforms that policymakers on both sides of the Atlantic have so far avoided.