Month: June 2021

The Internal Revenue Service has told the city of Winchester, Virginia it closed an audit of $28.6 million in 2012 general obligation refunding bonds without taking any adverse action. Winchester announced the decision Thursday in a public notice on the EMMA database of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board. “By letter dated June 1, 2021, the
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© Provided by Zee Business Long term investors planning to buy physical gold and silver have a news to cheer about. Weakness in Gold continued for the second straight week as the yellow metal closed negatively on Friday. There is a buying opportunity as the lower prices have started reflecting in the physical markets as
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The precious metals sector, in spite of the intense manipulation right now, is starting to reflect the soaring… by Dave Kranzler of Investment Research Dynamics “April 2021 money supply and monetary base growth continued to explode” – John Williams, Shadowstats.com Williams is referencing the “base” monetary aggregates which are compiled monthly. The Fed’s balance sheet grows
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From QR code payments to mobile banking apps, consumers worldwide are increasingly reliant on digital payment solutions, especially as mobile technology becomes more ubiquitous. Government-led efforts in driving cashless economies have been a key factor, with countries such as Singapore or the Philippines seeing their central banks driving the adoption of contactless payments during the
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Most entrepreneurs are risk-takers by nature, or at minimum calculated visionaries with a clear plan of action to launch a new product or service to fill a gap in the industry. On a personal level, many entrepreneurs take big risks to leave stable jobs to throw their efforts (and sometimes their own money) into launching
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When Federal Reserve officials convene on Tuesday for their latest two-day monetary policy meeting, questions over whether the central bank should start talking about tapering its $120bn monthly bond-buying programme will lead the agenda. Since the US central bank last met in late April, several senior Fed policymakers, including vice-chair Richard Clarida, have cracked the
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As temperatures rise, so has the demand for Manhattan real estate.  The median number of signed contracts across all Manhattan neighborhoods is up a staggering 78% compared to the same time last year, according to an analysis by real estate data firm UrbanDigs. Popular neighborhoods include Morningside Heights, where 56 contracts were signed this year,
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The Covid-19 pandemic made many pre-existing economic inequalities worse, including the precarious situation of Black and non-white workers and the pressures on women to juggle work and care responsibilities.  The pandemic also magnified economic pressures on vulnerable older workers, and our post-pandemic economic and equity policies must include them. Why do older workers matter to the economy?  First, they make up
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The outlook for the global asset management industry, plagued in recent years by unmerciful downward pressure on fees, is starting to look brighter. With memestocks, decentralized finance and non-fungible tokens capturing the headlines, money managers need to keep up with the zeitgeist. A new report suggests that the cryptocurrency markets offer a great opportunity for
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In this article WFC CLNE RIDE The Lordstown Motors Corp. Endurance electric pickup truck sits on stage during an unveiling event in Lordstown, Ohio, U.S., on Thursday, June 25, 2020. Matthew Hatcher | Bloomberg | Getty Images Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. Clean Energy Fuels — Shares of Clean Energy Fuels
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Recently, President Biden unveiled his 2022 budget request. Shortly afterwards, and for the first time since the Obama Administration, the U.S. Treasury Department released its General Explanations of the Administration’s Fiscal Year 2022 Revenue Proposals, better known as the “Green Book.” As was widely anticipated, President Biden’s budget calls for some significant changes to the capital
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Two bipartisan Senate infrastructure proposals unveiled Thursday have raised hope that the Biden administration will avert a Democrats-only approach. One involves a wide-ranging framework worked out by 10 senators while the other involves more narrowly tailored legislation that would spend $78 billion on passenger and freight rail. The narrowly focused bill is the latest bipartisan
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