Sentences with phrase «get at asset»

Prior to that I used funds just like you and still have several to get at asset classes I don't have time for researching and expertise in.
But the goal is to make it as difficult as possible for anyone to get at the assets that are contained within these trusts.»

Not exact matches

You want to get to a there, a point in the future (usually three to five years out) at which time your business will have a different set of resources and abilities as well as greater profitability and increased assets.
Just a couple of weeks ago, any media company with significant TV - related assets — including Disney, Comcast, 21st Century Fox and Time Warner — got hammered by investors, after a loss of subscribers at ESPN (which is owned by Disney) triggered fears about cord - cutting and the rise of streaming services.
«It's very hard to obviously get depositors to accept negative interest rates for putting their money in there,» said Marc Bushallow, managing director of fixed income at Manning and Napier, which manages $ 35 billion in assets.
«People didn't get their fill and they're still hungry for the bonds,» said Robert Arnold, a New York - based portfolio manager at TwentyFour Asset Management, which manages $ 16 billion.
«We're not seeing great sentiment one way or another, but bursts of enthusiasm this morning definitely got squelched by the comments and economic data,» said Boris Schlossberg, managing director of FX strategy at BK Asset Management.
«We like buying companies or assets that have some hair on them, which means you get them at a somewhat lower price.
Adam Fisher, who oversees macro investing at the New York - based Soros Fund Management, got internal approval to trade digital assets in the last few months, though...
After 18 months of negotiations, during which each side saw the climate get bleaker still, Chromalloy at last sold Foster the works through a deal for assets, financing essentially 100 % of the business by advancing working capital.
«What they're realizing is money managers like myself don't care about getting a sell in half a second,» said Michael Cohn, chief market strategist at Atlantis Asset Management.
I've heard rumblings of this issue at buyout shops — they're priced out of auctions for the best assets, and they're having to get more creative.
At the end of the term, the asset (usually real estate) is meant to be sold, and investors get their money.
I didn't make a lot of money, but I did get at least a small positive return from each of the asset classes I own, including equities, which is something given the TSX fell 11.07 % last year.
«They have talked about trying to rebalance the economy for 5 or 10 years now, but the imbalances got even worse, so you simply fall back on the model that got you into the difficulty in the first place,» said Peter Elston, head of Asia - Pacific strategy and asset allocation at Aberdeen Asset Manageasset allocation at Aberdeen Asset ManageAsset Management.
«At the beginning of the recession, when things started getting tough, people wanted to use their non-cash assets,» he says.
Since they are the ones getting into the less - exploited asset classes and strategies, they are also not achieving the economies of scale of a State Street SPDR ETF family or BlackRock's iShares, which can charge less based on massive asset bases, said Michael Rawson, ETF analyst at Morningstar.
If the asset's price drops, you will be getting more shares of the asset for the same amount of money, and so if and when the price recovers, you will have spent less per share, on average, than if you had bought the shares at their peak pre-fall price.
Adam Fisher, who oversees macro investing at the New York - based Soros Fund Management, got internal approval to trade digital assets in the last few months, though was yet...
If a company like iHeart gets in trouble and someone else want its assets, rather than buying the shares, they often buy the debt (bonds and loans) at a big discount.
See other blogs and authority sites as HUGE assets to help you get better at content creation, link building, conversion rate optimization, networking and more.
Stay the course and keep buying VTSAX on the cheap and at the same time adjust your asset allocation slowly into bonds as you get older.
Sam, great input (as always), posts like this keep me out of thinking about getting residential real estate into my investment portfolio, instead I focus on retail / industrial properties, however I think I could manage few residential units «on the side», because of lack of diversification I am thinking about buying a triplex at the moment, and I'm convinced that should be the last move and I would not touch the size of my real estate portfolio afterwards, remaining assets are going straight to stocks.
At the very least, you should check your asset allocation once a year or any time your financial circumstances change significantly — for instance, if you lose your job or get a big bonus.
At the same time, I want to reduce real estate as a percentage of my overall net worth, so I've got to hustle to grow my other assets.
I get at least a handful of emails every week from those either in retirement or approaching retirement with questions about how to structure their asset allocation or what the correct withdrawal rate is for a portfolio.
The main thing I got out of the book is looking at assets as putting money in my pocket and liabilities as taking money away.
By putting 20 % each in the three just mentioned asset classes, then 20 % in high dividend stocks and 20 % in low volatility stocks, I got to a portfolio with 5.2 % income at 4.8 % vol.
The best traders cut their losses and they get the hell out when they know they are wrong, and they NEVER put their portfolio, their major assets or their shareholder's assets at major risk if they get a trade wrong.
These sorts of special companies are rare enough that I truly don't understand why people aren't chomping at the bit to get their hands on some, not in the usual sense of «picking stocks», but as a permanent addition to the family's collection of assets that throw off passive income.
«Jeffrey Gundlach Celebrates Anniversary of Getting Fired in Cockiest Way Possible,» blared the headline at New York magazine's «Daily Intel» website, which reported that asset manager TCW fired the star bond investor three years ago Tuesday.
In yet another email exchange, Parrott notes that «all the investors will get this very quickly» in response to a message from Mary Goodman, a managing director at James Caird Asset Management (and a former Senior Advisor to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner who later served as Special Assistant to the President for Financial Markets at the National Economic Council), who stated that the Net Worth Sweep «should lay to rest permanently the idea that the outstanding privately held pref will ever get turned back on.»
If it refused to pay these penalties, at some point Uber's assets could be seized, although it's highly unlikely it would get to that point.
To get the latest read on what is going on with MLPs, ETF.com sat down with Jeremy Held, senior vice president and director of research at ALPS Advisors, issuer of the Alerian MLP ETF (AMLP), the world's largest MLP exchange - traded fund, with $ 8.3 billion in assets under management.
Until, of course, you remember the culture - induced myopia I described yesterday: Myerson still has the Ballmer-esque presumption that Microsoft controlled its own destiny and could have leveraged its assets (like Office) to win the smartphone market, ignoring that by virtue of being late Windows Phone was a product competing against ecosystems, which meant no consumer demand, which meant no developers, topped off by the arrogance to dictate to OEMs and carriers what they could and could not do to the phone, destroying any chance at leveraging distribution to get critical mass...
Wait no not that at all, he runs Goldman Sachs Asset Management, «the smallest division at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and usually the last one investors ask about,» but one that is having a moment recently, since it's performing well (both for customers and for the bank) and provides the sort of recurring fee - type revenue that you don't really get in prop trading.
By the time you get to your 60s, most target date funds are at or nearing their «glide path,» which means your asset allocation will be much more conservative.
That, in a nutshell, is why people want to get into oil stocks and why many portfolios have at least one oil - based asset.
It is important to know that when you operate as a sole proprietor, your personal assets may be at risk if your company gets sued.
ESI continues, «At $ 40,000 a year, the $ 600,000 would last for 15 years, which is more than enough time to get the rest of my assets.
At the center of this asset class, Consensus: Invest brings 600 + institutional investors, hedge funds, money managers, banks, and family offices together and offers attendees the chance to get connected with how to invest, store, trade and judge value in this new asset class.
Traders get to choose which assets to trade in, how many simultaneous trades at a time, the amount to be invested in every trade and the indicators to be used.
«There are pockets of areas that are getting stronger and weaker — certainly there is less demand in the oil patch — but overall I have not seen any market change in the amount of deal flow over the course of 2014 or 2015,» reports Michael W. Scolaro, managing director and group head of Asset Based Lending at BMO Harris Bank.
In a really large crisis, the return on risk assets may look decent from ten years before to ten years after, but a lot of people get surprised by their need to draw on those assets at the wrong moment — bad events come in bunches, when the credit cycle goes bust.
Our return expectations across most asset classes are at post-crisis lows, but we believe investors are getting compensated for taking on risk in equities, selected credit / emerging markets (EM) and alternatives.
A novel concept at the time, High Resolution Fundraising was put forth as a means to solve one of the hardest chicken - and - egg problems faced by nearly all fundraising companies: in an asset class historically dominated by social validation, how do you get someone to be your first investor?
If you visualize these in a pyramid form with the safe assets at the base, the risk assets at the top, and the growth in the middle, you should begin to get a picture of yourself as a financial person.
A lot of people are looking to get rich quick, but a more reliable method is to build wealth at a moderately swift pace by increasing your income, saving aggressively, and investing smartly in dividend stocks, index funds, and other asset classes.
«If you're in year 10,» says David Ewer, executive director of the Montana Board of Investments, which manages $ 10 billion in pension assets, «there's at least a 50/50 chance you've still got a long tail in front of you.»
Unfortunately, the only chance you have to financially survive what is coming at us is to get your money out of all financial «assets
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