пятница, 1 марта 2013 г.

Personal Finance News - March 1

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USA TODAY - Personal Finance March 1
NEWS SPORTS LIFE MONEY TECH TRAVEL OPINION WEATHER
Police take away a woman protesting where former Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi was voting, in Milan, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 24, 2013.
Investing: Europe is a mess, but it's cheap

Europe is a mess but their stocks are cheap. Is it time a good time to buy?
Bank of America's headquarters in Charlotte.
Foreclosure settlement to distribute $3.6 billion

Regulators and 13 banks say 4.2 million people will receive payments.
401(k) fee disclosures receive little reaction.
Little reaction to 401(k) fee disclosure

Even after fee disclosure, many workers still do not know how much they pay in fees.

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MORE HEADLINES
Individual retirement account
columnist
Ask Matt: You can still cut your 2012 tax bill
One way you can still reduce your 2012 tax bill is to fund a retirement account.
A specialist watches stocks fall on his monitor from his booth on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
columnist
Ask Matt: Options for tracking your portfolio
Investors looking to use mobile devices or computers to track portfolios have many options
Study finds gap between white and African American families nearly tripled over 25 years.
Personal Finance
Study shows racial wealth gap continues to widen
Study finds gap between white and African-American families nearly tripled in 25 years.
Protesters in Doral, Fla., in December make their feelings known about potential cuts to Social Security.
Personal Finance
Social Security: 5 things you need to know
Five things you should know about Social Security and your retirement future.
Several of Smith & Wesson new product pistols are displayed at a trade show in Las Vegas.
markets
Wall Street likes gunmakers, but from a distance
Wall Street likes gunmakers, but from a safe distance.
Silver ingot. Investing in silver is nowhere near a sure thing.
columnist
Ask Matt: Silver isn't guaranteed a shiny return
Commodity investors like to think an asset is safer somehow if it's dug out of the ground.
The divorce rate among adults 50 and older doubled between 1990 and 2009, according to a study.
columnist
Boomer divorce: A costly retirement roadblock
Baby Boomers are divorcing at a surprising rate, with huge implications for retirement.

 

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