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March 25, 2011 | ||
Investing IntelligenceInsights and analysis from Bloomberg Businessweek and Businessweek.com |
MARKETS & FINANCE In Today's Market, the Wisdom of Standing Pat The market's drop then gain after Japan's triple crises shows the stock rally's resilience and the futility of timing market hiccups VIEWPOINT A College Degree Is Still Worth It Sure, it costs more, and technology is threatening high-paying jobs. But the Great Recession shows postsecondary education is more valuable than ever HARDWARE Boom Times for Genomics Startups Investment is picking up as sales of gene sequencing machines surge INVESTMENT BANKING The AT&T Deal Gives Evercore a Boost The investment bank has advised on some of the biggest global mergers in 2011 INVESTMENTS Libya Has $70 Billion to Invest—and No Takers Private equity firms such as California's Colony Capital once courted Libyan investments, but backed off before the war broke out REGULATION An SEC Rule on Global Pay Could Embarrass Companies Some are fighting a plan requiring companies to report the ratio between executive and median employee pay, including wages of overseas workers FINANCIAL CRISIS Bear Stearns Alumni Are All Over Wall Street Former Bear executives are running bond businesses at onetime rivals such as Bank of America and Goldman Sachs MUTUAL FUND SCOREBOARD How's Your Fund Doing? Our Interactive Scoreboard has complete results for some 2,500 equity funds, hundreds with BW's exclusive risk-adjusted ratings
| Inside: This Week in Investing
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The right Munis and securities insurers can increase your yield without sacrificing quality and protect against lower interest rates. Stoever Glass. [an error occurred while processing this directive] Reader RNB Writes:"Apparently, for James Oberstar, airlines aren't businesses -- they are jobs programs. If a merged Delta-NWA were to be headquartered in Minneapolis, he'd be all for it. Otherwise, forget it."Tell Us: Should Airlines Become More United? >BLOG Investing Insights Dividends are back in the game, but it's going to be a long game. The Fed action allowing most banks (BAC not) to increase their dividends is a start, but it is going to be years until we see them paying out at the levels of 2007. I remain very positive on dividends, and it's a good start, but it's only the first inning. |
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