Word: nest
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...when the bubble was inflating. Who knew we should have been blaming our brokers all along? Lawyers working on contingency fees, that's who, and they are eager to help recoup the $3 trillion that investors have lost since the NASDAQ tanked last spring. For retirees who fried their nest eggs or boomers who blew their kids' college tuition on margin, the road to restitution could be as easy as dialing 877-CAN-I-SUE (where you'll reach some New York City lawyers...
...seek consensus on key policy matters, which may take some adjustment. And the same will be true on the international stage, much to the relief of the Washington's European allies and even Secretary of State Powell, who has at time looked like a rather lonesome dove in a nest of hawks...
Remember, that money is growing tax-deferred. Even a $5,000 nest egg could mushroom into more than $50,000 in 30 years (based on an 8% annual growth rate), according to benefit consultants at Hewitt Associates. If you decide to take the $5,000, you may be surprised when you get a check for just $2,850. That's all that would be left, assuming a 28% federal tax, 5% state tax and 10% early-withdrawal penalty. If you have at least $5,000, you can leave the money in your employer's plan until you decide what...
...Remember, that money is growing tax-deferred. Even a $5,000 nest egg could mushroom into more than $50,000 in 30 years (based on an 8% annual growth rate), according to benefit consultants at Hewitt Associates. If you decide to take the $5,000, you may be surprised when you get a check for just $2,850. That's all that would be left, assuming a 28% federal tax, 5% state tax and 10% early-withdrawal penalty. If you have at least $5,000, you can leave the money in your employer's plan until you decide what...
...investment superstar was busy building the Fidelity Magellan mutual fund into a $13 billion behemoth, his youngest daughter got to be seven years old, and he felt he hardly knew her. Last spring he stunned Wall Street when he decided to give up his 14-hour workdays. With a nest egg estimated at $50 million, Lynch could well afford to quit. But many ordinary people evidently felt a connection with what he did, for he received more than 1,000 letters of support for his move. These days, while other investment managers are scanning their market data at dawn, Lynch...