пятница, 3 мая 2013 г.

Mortgage rates fall again; Japan rises

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USA TODAY - Personal Finance May 3
NEWS SPORTS LIFE MONEY TECH TRAVEL OPINION WEATHER
Investors are concerned about revenue growth.
Ask Matt: Finding companies with revenue growth

Q: Which large companies posted the most revenue growth in 2012?
A currency trader checks monitors at a foreign exchange company in Tokyo.
Rising in the East: Fund managers rediscover Japan

Mutual fund managers are discovering Japan.
A pedestrian is reflected in a window as he walks by a display of mortgage rates June 7, 2012. Rates have come down since then.
15-year mortgages at record low 2.56% avg.

30-year loan average also fell, to 3.35% last week.

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MORE HEADLINES
Gold bars are displayed at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington, D.C.
columnist
Ask Matt: Gold loses its shine as an investment choice
Gold and foreign stocks have been laggard since the market lows of March 9, 2009.
The so-called Great Rotation  from bonds to stocks has yet to reach full potential.
markets
Deflation, not inflation, could bedevil markets
Treasury yields fall to 2013 lows on fears that falling prices are biggest economic risk.
Products parents should be most concerned about.
columnist
Products parents should be most concerned about
Product safety is continually being updated, so it pays to keep up.
New cars sit on the sales lot of a Chevrolet dealership in Colma, Calif.
columnist
Ask Matt: Does new GM owe old GM investors?
Can old GM investors get money from the new GM?
Wellness programs may help employers keep health care costs down.
Personal Finance
Quick Tips: The costs of the health care law
Many of the major components of the Affordable Care Act go into effect on Jan.1, 2014.
A stock's price-to-earnings number isn't the only ratio worth looking at.
columnist
Ask Matt: What ratios, other than P-E, are important?
A stock's price-to-earnings number isn't the only ratio worth looking at.
Not all pre-IPO companies work out so well.
columnist
Ask Matt: Should I buy shares of my pre-IPO company?
Investors, beware -- not all pre-IPO deals work out so well.

 

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