Thursday, 1 August 2019

When financing retirement, balance emotion and math

Reuters.com Newsletter

When financing retirement, balance emotion and math

With the U.S. Congress poised to pass a bill allowing annuities to be offered in mainstream 401(k) plans, Americans soon will be asking a lot of questions about these financial products that provide guaranteed lifetime income for an upfront investment.

What a Fed rate cut means for your wallet

The U.S. Federal Reserve's decision on Wednesday to lower interest rates may do little to cut some of the costs that matter to many consumers.

Record highs in U.S. stock market not enough to attract fund investors

Investors retreated from the U.S. stock market last week despite the benchmark S&P 500 reaching new record highs, pulling nearly $9.1 billion from mutual funds and exchange-traded funds that hold domestic stocks, according to data released Wednesday by the Investment Company Institute.

UBS plans to charge rich clients for Swiss cash deposits

UBS Group will impose from November a negative interest rate of 0.75% on wealthy clients who deposit more than 2 million Swiss francs ($2.02 million) with its Swiss bank, it said on Wednesday, citing expectations for a long period of ultra-loose monetary policy.

BlackRock raises $2 billion for Global Credit Opportunities Fund

BlackRock Inc, the world's largest asset management firm, said on Wednesday it had raised $2 billion for its flagship opportunistic credit fund, Global Credit Opportunities, reflecting investor demand for alternative investments.

Computers boost Man Group first-half assets, shares up

British hedge fund manager Man Group  said assets rose 5% in the first half of the year, helped by performance in its computer-driven strategies, boosting fee income and sending its shares higher.

St. James's Place first-half inflows slow, misses on operating profit

British wealth manager St. James's Place said on Wednesday that weaker client sentiment weighed on inflows of new money in the first half of the year while costs rose, leading it to miss forecasts for operating profit.

U.S. money market strains will remain even with Fed rate cut: DoubleLine's Campbell

Even if the Federal Reserve this week goes ahead and cuts benchmark interest rates for the first time in more than a decade - as it is widely expected to do - U.S. money market strains will remain, Bill Campbell, co-portfolio manager of the DoubleLine Global Bond Fund, said on Tuesday.

Related Videos

Fed delivers first rate cut since financial crisis

Euro zone growth halves in spur for ECB

Introducing the all-new
Reuters News app

The new Reuters News app is here, redesigned from the ground up to fit your busy life.

Get it now on iOS