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...beautiful as the Sugar Plum Fairy. With excellent line and form, her performance of the famous Marius Petipa choreography was truly a pleasure to watch. As usual, the lighting and costumes complemented the mood of each piece. However, on a minor note, HBC may want to invest in white and light pink leotards that are double lined.Overall, HBC delivered a well-received performance. It is not only purists who will agree that the second half of the show was more enjoyable—and the recital ended on a strong and positive note with the smiles of both the ballerinas...
...acknowledges that perhaps 90 million households in the U.S.—out of about 110 million—have the resources to take his advice on the show and invest in the stock market. He says he doesn’t want to give the impression that trading stocks is an easy way to make money; he counsels his viewers to spend one hour per week researching every stock they...
Rodgers isn't just being curmudgeonly. He and other critics believe that shareholders entrust managers with their investment solely to maximize long-term returns, not so those managers can use the proceeds to underwrite their urge to better the world. It is unclear how many of America's CEOs silently sympathize with Rodgers' views. But a large and rapidly growing number are neck deep in CSR initiatives, spending billions, tackling everything from AIDS in Africa to deforestation in Brazil. If anyone doubted that CSR has finally come of age in the U.S., they were probably set straight in October when...
American Funds' Taylor argues that the multiple-manager approach removes size as an issue. Money is parceled out to stock pickers--in the case of Growth Fund, to nine managers and 30 analysts--who invest their portion as they like. When more cash comes in, they add more managers. In theory, the pot never gets too big. Yet this approach has limitations. By design, the fund cannot own more than 10% of any one company. If every manager likes the same stock, one or more must relent--or all get less than they want, which undermines the idea that many...
...times, they have achanged. Socially responsible investments (SRIs) are all the rage these days, and it turns out they are competitive with their less benevolent counterparts. Over the past five years, socially responsible funds that invest in large-cap companies earned an average 11.99% return. Regular large-cap funds managed 12.60%. While that's still a disparity, it's not huge, and to many, it's a small price to pay to make the world better. "SRI funds have gotten a bad rap," says Tim Smith of Walden Asset Management, a financial consulting firm that specializes in SRIs. "Over...