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By Allison Bell |
May 6, 2013
Honesty about uncertainty is kinder than making promises you can't necessarily keep.
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By Richard LaVoice |
February 27, 2013
Fixed indexed annuities are like a Cy Young-caliber pitcher who can also hit home runs. They protect principal and provide growth.
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By Arthur D. Postal and Elizabeth D. Festa |
January 1, 2013
The Treasury Department is selling its remaining 16 percent of the common shares of American International Group (AIG), hopefully putting paid to its tumultuous 50-month shotgun financial tryst with the global insurer.
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By Martin Crutsinger |
December 11, 2012
The Federal Reserve is expected to announce a revamped bond-buying plan Wednesday to maintain its support for the U.S. economy.
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By Arthur D. Postal and Elizabeth Festa |
December 11, 2012
The Treasury Department is selling its remaining 16 percent of the common shares of AIG, hopefully putting paid to its tumultuous 50-month shotgun financial tryst with the global insurer.
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By Arthur D. Postal |
August 24, 2012
AIG hits a milestone in ending the government's equity interest in the once-troubled insurance giant.
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By Paul Wiseman |
August 15, 2012
The recession that ended three years ago this summer has been followed by the feeblest economic recovery since the Great Depression.
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By Allison Bell |
August 15, 2012
Business owners are trying to borrow from broke relatives. That can't be good for you.
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By Elizabeth Festa |
August 14, 2012
What will federal regulation of insurance holding companies like AIG look like?
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By Paula Aven Gladych |
June 6, 2012
The idea that the baby boomers — who began retiring in droves in 2011 — will eventually crash the stock market has been going around for years. But will it actually happen?