Word: bianco
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...undulating hillside avenues. But some roads should be sought out, notably Via Garibaldi, a majestic stretch of cobblestone flanked by 16th century villas just above the old port. One of those palaces, Palazzo Tursi, has been the site of City Hall since 1848; others (Palazzo Rosso and Palazzo Bianco) have been turned into museums. When this city of 700,000 was picked - along with Lille, France - to be European Capital of Culture for 2004, the Italian government poured in $40 million for more than 100 special events from jazz concerts to history classes. And Via Garibaldi, which housed the noble...
...close this gap, companies will have to divert more money to their pension plans. UBS Warburg analyst David Bianco estimates that pension costs will make S&P 500 earnings 95¢ lower per share than they would otherwise be this year. Companies with the greatest pension shortfalls are candidates to announce a special charge, which often creams a stock. "It's perilous to assume these issues are already reflected in stock prices," Bianco warns. Pension accounting is so complex, he says, that the underfunding issue isn't fully appreciated...
REBALANCE YOUR PORTFOLIO. The stock market has gone through its worst 36-month period since France fell to Germany in 1940, reports Bianco Research. Bonds have outperformed. If you haven't made adjustments, bonds have grown into a bigger slice of your portfolio than you intended. Get the allocation back in line: for folks under 50, 70% stocks (some foreign), 20% bonds, 10% cash. It's a great way to catch any turn in the market. "We rebalance four times a year," says Thomas Orecchio of financial advisers Greenbaum & Orecchio...
...REBALANCE YOUR PORTFOLIO. The stock market has gone through its worst 36-month period since France fell to Germany in 1940, reports Bianco Research. Bonds have outperformed. If you haven't made adjustments, bonds have grown into a bigger slice of your portfolio than you intended. Get the allocation back in line: for folks under 50, 70% stocks (some foreign), 20% bonds, 10% cash. It's a great way to catch any turn in the market. "We rebalance four times a year," says Thomas Orecchio of financial advisers Greenbaum & Orecchio...
Similarly, Bianco said she was happy to turn over the reins to another Harvard student...