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By Savita Iyer-Ahrestani, AdvisorOne |
March 11, 2013
Fears that the European crisis would once again raise its head caused spreads on almost all high-yield bonds to widen.
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By Savita Iyer-Ahrestani, AdvisorOne |
February 25, 2013
It has been a harrowing few years for the Spanish banking system, but now, some experts believe that it is on a positive course for the future.
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By SARAH DiLORENZO, Associated Press Business Writer |
December 21, 2012
Without an agreement, the U.S. economy will fall off the so-called fiscal cliff on Jan. 1 when Bush-era tax cuts expire and spending cuts kick in automatically.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
August 30, 2012
The ECB head wants to buy bonds, and he doesn’t want to wait—and says it’s not necessary—to wait for closer political unity among European nations to do so.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
August 29, 2012
Should that happen, it is likely to increase pressure on the country’s central bank to boost easing measures.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
July 19, 2012
Regulators are questioning how interest rates are set across the globe—not just LIBOR and EURIBOR, but also various in-country rates.
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By John Sullivan, AdvisorOne |
July 17, 2012
It’s a scary name for a scary situation.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne, Joyce Hanson, AdvisorOne |
June 22, 2012
Fifteen banks in the U.S., U.K. and Europe with global capital markets operations saw their ratings cut by Moody’s, some by as many as three notches.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
June 13, 2012
Despite a weekend bailout for Spain’s banking sector that was meant to reassure investors, markets continued to punish the southern eurozone.
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By Michael S. Fischer |
May 7, 2012
Family Office Exchange, which serves high-net-worth families and their advisors around the world, appointed Alexandre Monnier president last week.