-
By Michael Ham |
May 24, 2012
With both 10- and 30-year treasury rates unbelievably low, profit margins on fixed product are comparatively nil. Why would Aviva want to bail out on America now?
-
By Maria Wood |
May 18, 2012
After weeks of speculation about the sale of its U.S. division, the acting head of Aviva PLC says the company will consider the sale of some of its business units.
-
By Michael Ham |
May 3, 2012
Maybe Ben Bernanke knows something the pundits, bloggers and self-proclaimed experts do not understand: Savvy investments are not about cost, but about what you get for your money.
-
By Brian Anderson |
April 2, 2012
Life insurance? There’s an app for that. Or a thousand. Here are a few that caught my eye after I recently began loading up a new iPad with a wide variety of apps.
-
By Staff Writer |
March 19, 2012
Bank suffers market hit following comments made by a former employee in a New York Times op-ed piece.
-
By Staff Writer |
March 14, 2012
The gap is only getting wider as the number of adults hitting retirement age grows.
-
By Arthur D. Postal |
March 12, 2012
A tax break provided to American International Group came under heavy fire today from four members of the former oversight panel created to monitor the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
-
By Elizabeth Festa, with previous material by Arthur D. Postal |
March 5, 2012
New York Department of Financial Services Superintendent Benjamin Lawsky said he hopes that his department’s focus on retained asset accounts (RAAs) will become a national standard.
-
By Arthur D. Postal |
March 5, 2012
American International Group today sold 14 percent of the stock of its Hong Kong life insurer, AIA Group, Ltd., for approximately $6 billion.
-
By Staff Writer |
February 24, 2012
Among the many dislocations Wall Street has suffered since 2008, none may have been more destabilizing to employees than Morgan Stanley's announcement in January that it would cap cash bonuses at $125,000.