The most popular strategy used by a majority of Affluent Investors, 60 percent, was to donate to charity. If that doesn't work, another 18 percent chose to sell … on reducing your taxes talk to an advisor. Check out our Best Financial Advisors …
Affluent Indians as also the not-so-super rich Indians are joining a wave of foreign property buyers, who see the recovering US housing market as a safe haven for their money, according to the New York Times. While for affluent … "Buyers from India …
… which typically charge 1 to 3 percent of client assets in managed account programs, have said they do not feel threatened by robo-brokers because they make money offering more sophisticated wealth-planning and investment services to wealthy clients.
It would not allow ex-congressmen to trade on their insider connections for at least five years–which might then produce fewer power-engrossing lawyer-politicians and more–let's be really optimistic here–systems engineer- or bioethicist-politicians, i …
A 2013 RAND study, for example, revealed that low-income urban neighborhoods "not only have more fast food restaurants and convenience stores than more affluent ones, but more grocery stores, supermarkets and full-service restaurants, too," according …
ES) – Charles Schwab Corp. is weeks away from introducing an automated investing service aimed at winning business from novice investors it does not currently serve, company officials told NEWS.GNOM.ES. … Executives at some large broker-dealers …
The service is being developed in-house and likely will be free, giving the San Francisco-based discount brokerage pioneer a leg up on a slew of upstart firms known as robo-brokers that charge management fees of 0.15 to 0.35 per cent of a client's …
A number of new online investment platforms are challenging the dominance of traditional wealth managers by offering low-cost services that aim to undercut their competitors' fees by nearly a third. The founders of SCM Private, a wealth manager, last …
According to various pundits, a gambit observed by most hospitals is to overbill those patients with health insurance, and then enter into negotiations with the insurance provider that usually results in the fees for service rolled back to a more …