Author: super@dmin
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On International Women’s Day, how female investors can detect biased financial advice
Research shows that gender bias in financial advice is prevalent.
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Market Snapshot: Stocks on track for steep weekly losses on disappointing jobs report, China trade data
Stocks trade lower Friday after a disappointing jobs report and weak data out of China added to gloom surrounding the global economy and U.S.-China trade relations.
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Northern Ireland is taking a ‘business as usual’ approach as Brexit looms
As the March 29 deadline for Brexit approaches with no sign the U.K. government is close to a final deal, one region is watching the proceedings with a bit more at stake than others.
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Cryptos: Here’s how bitcoin volatility cravers can capitalize on a potential ‘catastrophic move to the downside’
For volatility-craving traders, 2019 has offered up few opportunities for bitcoin punters looking to capitalize on the wild price swings they had grown accustomed to.
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Currencies: Dollar extends loss after weaker-than-expected jobs report
The dollar extends its losses on Friday, following a weaker-than-expected February U.S. jobs report.
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Key Words: U.K.’s Theresa May says ‘we may never leave’ EU if her deal fails in Parliament
The drama around Brexit went into the next round on Friday, when Prime Minister Theresa May said if the British Parliament failed to support her deal “we might never leave the EU.”
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The ‘smart money’ prefers Alibaba over Amazon, Intel over AMD, and Google over Apple
The change came after popular tech stocks were sold short late last year.
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Top Ten: Weekend roundup: Luke Perry’s death points to health concerns for young adults | Warning about Boeing’s stock | A big IPO in China
10 years since the stock market bottomed in the wake of the financial crisis.
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Retire Better: Redefining ‘old,’ getting philosophical about death and the scary truth about 401(k) balances
Retirement news you shouldn’t miss.
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The Fed: Fed’s pause now extends through September in wake of weak jobs report
The Federal Reserve’s pause on interest rates now extends through September in wake of weak jobs report, economists said Friday.