5 Minutes Read

Long-term bull market in stocks? Perhaps not: Jim Rogers

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

Stellar gains in equity markets do not necessarily signal the start of a long-term bull trend, billionaire investor Jim Rogers told CNBC’s “The Kudlow Report,” adding that the rally in stocks is just the result of ultra-easy monetary policy by the world’s major central banks.

Stellar gains in equity markets do not necessarily signal the start of a long-term bull trend, billionaire investor Jim Rogers told CNBC’s “The Kudlow Report,” adding that the rally in stocks is just the result of ultra-easy monetary policy by the world’s major central banks.


“I am short bonds, but I’m not sure there is going to be a long-term bull market in stocks. There is a lot of money printing,” Rogers said. “So this (the rally) is artificial.”


(Read More: Why 10-Year Notes Could Suffer a Dramatic Sell-Off)


Since the start of the year, the S&P 500 stock index has gained more than six percent, while the yield on benchmark 10-year US Treasurys has crept higher as investors dump safe-haven assets and snap up riskier ones amid a generally improving outlook for the global economy.


That trend has led some commentators to bet on the start of “Great Rotation” out of bonds and into equity markets.


“I think we may be on the brink of something we haven’t seen for a long-time. We have seen the end of bonds as an attractive investment for a long time,” Zane Brown, fixed income strategist at Lord Abbett said on “The Kudlow Report.”


“There does seem to be great value in equities and we’re only starting to see interest,” he added.


In Japan, a sharp fall in the yen on expectations of aggressive monetary easing has helped boost the benchmark Nikkei stock index up some 26 percent in the last three months. The Nikkei is up more than 7 percent since the start of the year.


(Read More: Aso: Yen Has Weakened More Than Intended)


“I own (Japanese) shares and they (the Japanese authorities) are making them go through the roof, so in that sense I have to say thank you,” Rogers, the author of the book “Street Smarts” said.


“But debasing the currency and printing money is not a good thing,” he added, referring to a policy of printing money that leads to currency weakness.


The Bank of Japan last month adopted a 2 percent inflation target to reflect its commitment to fight deflation. It also said it would shift to “open-ended” asset buying – a policy the US Federal Reserve has adopted to revive the world’s biggest economy.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

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Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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 5 Minutes Read

Emerging markets: Big story of 2013?

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

As investors get more comfortable about the global economy and fears recede about a dreaded hard landing in China, investors have been pouring money back into emerging markets exchange-traded funds in the past few months.

As investors get more comfortable about the global economy and fears recede about a dreaded hard landing in China, investors have been pouring money back into emerging markets exchange-traded funds in the past few months.


Emerging market exchange-traded products (ETPs) attracted a record USD 27.1 billion in the fourth quarter, only slightly lagging the USD 30 billion developed market ETPs attracted in the quarter, according to BlackRock data.


This strength continued into January. “Emerging market equities is really the big story of January,” Dodd Kittersley, BlackRock’s head of ETP research, told CNBC last week. “We’ve seen over USD 13 billion flow in to those products,” with USD 7 billion going into broad-market funds.


Investors have clearly favored China, as concerns about its economy ease. Goldman Sachs’ Jim O’Neill, the man who coined the term BRICs, told CNBC, “China is slowly adjusting to an economy not so dependent on exports or government investments. That’s what they need and what we all want from them.”


(Read More: ETFs Growing and Growing, and ‘Here to Conquer’)


And as those fears abate, investors are jumping back into the China stocks, pushing the MSCI China 50 A share index up nearly 35 percent in the past three months.


“Just talking about China, China’s been an unbelievable story,” BlackRock’s Kittersley said. “China ETPs attracted USD 20 billion last year and over USD 4 billion in January.”


But economist Nouriel Roubini warned that the BRICs have been over-hyped for some time. “India, Russia, and China, all of them are moving towards state capitalism, and that’s actually going to slow potential growth,” he told CNBC.


Roubini said that, in terms of growth, all emerging markets should not be lumped together. The success stories in Latin America are Chile and Colombia, not Brazil, he said, and there’s better growth in the Philippines and Indonesia than either China or India.


(Read More: ‘Easy Money’ Will Help Stocks for Foreseeable Future: Roubini)


Echoing Roubini’s advice to be selective, Principal Financial’s Jim McCaughan told CNBC this week that he would not invest in a broad emerging market index fund. “You have to be selective,” he said, but unlike Roubini, he prefers China, Brazil, and Colombia to Russia or Argentina.


(Read More: India in a ‘Horror Show’ as Growth Slumps)


There are signs that investors are being choosy, even as they pour money into broad ETFs. “We’re seeing clear demand for both for broad emerging markets as well as being able to be very specific and tactical with individual countries,” BlackRock’s Kittersley said.


McCaughan of Principal Financial said that even with the renewed interest in emerging market stocks, US investors could still allocate more money to emerging market stocks.


(Read More: The Safest Emerging Market Banks)


“Compared with the opportunities in emerging markets, most investors based in the US are pitifully low in their allocation,” the investment strategist said. “And 20 percent, 30 percent, 40 percent of your equities in emerging markets is not too outlandish, given the importance of those economies and given the likely growth —and particularly the growth of the middle class and how that will power economic prosperity.”


This growth should help emerging market stocks outperform their US counterparts, analysts believe. “I do think the emerging markets represent an excellent buying opportunity here,” Carmine Grigoli, chief investment strategist at Mizuho Securities, told CNBC. “I think they tend to outperform the US going forward.”

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

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KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
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Safest banks in emerging markets

Uncertain growth prospects in the developed world are turning more companies and investors toward emerging markets for better gains. How secure are the financial systems in these rapidly developing economies? While some banks in emerging markets may be growing at an unprecedented pace, they could also be exposing clients to more credit risks and higher funding costs.

With this in mind, we look at the 10 safest banks in emerging markets based on rankings by the Global Finance magazine, which publishes an annual list of the top 50. The rankings are based on ratings assigned by the three major credit ratings agencies — Fitch Ratings, Standard & Poor's, and Moody's. To be eligible for the ranking, banks must be among the 500 largest in emerging markets by asset size and have a rating from two of the three major agencies.

So, which are the safest banks in emerging markets? Click ahead to find out.

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10. Bank of Taiwan
Country: Taiwan
Total assets: USD 129.8 billion

The Bank of Taiwan is the highest-ranked Taiwanese bank in the top 50 rankings of the safest banks in emerging markets, but is one of six banks from the country to make the list.

The bank was founded in 1946 as the first state-owned bank following the island's restoration to the Republic of China in 1945. In its early years, the Bank of Taiwan carried out many functions of a central bank, like issuing currency, until the Central Bank of China in Taiwan was re-established in 1961. At the end of 2011, the bank's assets totaled USD 131 billion but have since fallen to under USD130 billion as of November 2012. It still makes it the largest bank in Taiwan based on assets.

Bank of Taiwan is rated A by Standard & Poor's and Aa3 by Moody's and has the highest credit rating among all the country's major banks.

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9. BancoEstado
Country: Chile
Total assets: USD 40 billion

BancoEstado is the only Latin American bank to make the top 10 rankings, but is one of four Chilean banks to make the top 50 safest list — highlighting the improving creditworthiness of the country's financial institutions.

The bank is the only state-owned commercial bank in Chile. It is also the nation's third-largest bank by loans, and branch network but is first in terms of deposits, according to Fitch. The bank is rated A by Fitch and S&P and Aa3 by Moody's. BancoEstado's strong link with the government and social objective to increase access to banking services and home ownership for low-income residents, gives it a stable outlook amid Chile's developing economy, according to S&P. All ratings agencies have said there's a high likelihood that the Chilean government would step in and provide support to the bank in the event of financial distress.

Riding the wave of economic growth in Chile, which is expected to post a 5.5 percent expansion in 2012 and to grow between 4.25 percent and 5.25 percent this year, BancoEstado has fared well catering to Chile's developing middle class. The bank's fee income grew nearly 13 percent year-on-year in the third quarter of 2012.

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8. Samba Financial Group
Country: Saudi Arabia
Total assets: USD 51.4 billion

Samba Financial Group is Saudi Arabia's second-largest bank by market value.

Founded in 1980 with a takeover of Citibank branches in Saudi Arabian cities Jeddah and Riyadh, the bank was formerly known as Saudi American Bank until 2003. The bank now has nearly 70 branches, including international locations in London, Qatar and Dubai, along with a presence in Pakistan through a subsidiary. Samba Financial Group is rated A by Fitch and S&P and Aa3 by Moody's. The Saudi government's long track record of supporting the banking sector should bode well for the bank, which is over 50 percent owned by the government through three public agencies, according to Fitch.

In March 2012, the rating agency had said the bank would benefit from the strengthening of its core net special commission income, which is net interest income. But, recent earnings show that Samba Financial saw a nearly 8 percent fall in the fourth-quarter net profit to USD 231.7 million, compared to the previous year, after income from special commissions declined. Special commissions fell 5.4 percent to USD 266 million in the fourth quarter from 2011.

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7. Qatar National Bank
Country: Qatar
Total assets: USD 82.9 billion

The Qatar National Bank (QNB) is not only the country's safest, it's also the largest, with more than 50 percent of the banking system's assets and deposits.

Founded in 1964, the bank is the country's first Qatari-owned commercial bank. Half the bank is owned by the Qatar Investment Authority, Qatar's sovereign wealth fund, and it makes up nearly a fifth of the country's total stock market capitalization. The bank has stakes in lenders in Indonesia, Jordan, Tunisia and the United Arab Emirates (U.A.E), and is now looking at majority stakes in a Turkish bank and the Egyptian unit of Societe Generale.

QNB is rated A by S&P and Fitch and AA3 by Moody's. S&P cites the bank's strengths to be its dominant commercial position domestically, strong capital and earnings. Recent full-year earnings from QNB lived up to expectations, with net profit up over 11 percent to USD 2.2 billion in 2012, compared to the previous year. Meanwhile, total assets grew over 21 percent to USD 100.8 billion in the same period — the highest ever — thanks to a nearly 29 percent increase in loans and advances.

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6. Korea Finance Corp.
Country: South Korea
Total assets: USD 157 billion

State-owned Korea Finance Corp. is one of nine South Korean banks to make the top 50 list of the safest banks in emerging markets.

Founded in 2009 as a policy bank, it was created from the divestment of assets from the Korea Development Bank. A policy bank implements government directed spending to support growth in the economy. The bank is rated AA- by Fitch, A by S&P, and Aa3 by Moody's. S&P said its stable rating of the bank reflected their opinion of South Korea's long term outlook, because of the bank's integral link with the government that gives it capital injections, and guarantees.

In October, the state-owned lender bid for its first plane-financing deal and started offering loans to shipbuilders. In 2013, it plans to increase lending to small-sized and mid-size businesses to 62 percent of its total financing in the year to USD 7.1 billion, up from 53 percent in 2012.

Click here to see the rest of the safest banks in emerging markets.

 5 Minutes Read

Easy money will help stocks for foreseeable future: Roubini

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

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Summary

The “easy money” policy of the Federal Reserve will continue for “as far as the eye can see” and that’s going to continue to be good for the US stock market, noted economist Nouriel Roubini told CNBC on Tuesday.

The “easy money” policy of the Federal Reserve will continue for “as far as the eye can see” and that’s going to continue to be good for the US stock market, noted economist Nouriel Roubini told CNBC on Tuesday.


“When you look at the [mixed] economic data, there’s a gap between the fact that the markets, rightly so, are buoyant,” he said, “because middle of last year central banks had done another massive round of quantitative easing.”


(Read More: ‘Very Favorable’ Momentum for US Stocks: Goldman’s O’Neill)


“Some of the improvement in the markets is not because growth is picking up … certainly easy money implies asset inflation,” Roubini said.


Nicknamed “Dr. Doom” for predicting hard times ahead of the 2008 fiscal crisis, Roubini said he also sees positives and negatives for the American economy.


“There are some positives in the U.S. this year. You have QE, you have housing, you have the shale gas, you have some recovery in jobs in manufacturing,” he explained in a “Squawk Box” interview. “But between the [January] fiscal deal … and probably ‘the sequester,’ or something similar, we might have a $300 billion fiscal drag this year.”


(Read More: Obama to Meet With CEOs of Goldman, Yahoo, Other Firms)


He predicted that sequestration — the process for across-the-board government spending cuts — could technically put the U.S. in a double-dip recession with near-zero growth in the first quarter, following negative growth in the fourth quarter.


(Read More: Why This Is ‘Best-Looking’ GDP Drop You’ll Ever See)


But for this year, he sees economic growth in the 1.6 percent to 1.7 percent range with continued high unemployment.


“[The unemployment rate] is not going to fall to 6.5 percent, which is the trigger for the Fed stopping zero policy rates,” said Roubini, co-founder and chairman of Roubini Global Economics.


(Read More: Economy Adds Another 157,000 Jobs; Rate Up to 7.9%)


The Fed has not put a target on when it’ll stop quantitative easing, but he added that he thinks it’s a jobless rate of 7 percent, which he doesn’t see happening this year either.

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

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Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

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today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
Quiz
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Should Elon Musk be able to buy Twitter?

 5 Minutes Read

In hard economy for all ages, older isn’t better

KV Prasad Jun 13, 2022, 06:35 AM IST (Published)

 Listen to the Article (6 Minutes)

Summary

Young graduates are in debt, out of work and on their parents’ couches. People in their 30s and 40s can’t afford to buy homes or have children. Retirees are earning near-zero interest on their savings.

Young graduates are in debt, out of work and on their parents’ couches. People in their 30s and 40s can’t afford to buy homes or have children. Retirees are earning near-zero interest on their savings.


In the current listless economy, every generation has a claim to having been most injured. But the Labor Department’s latest jobs snapshot and other recent data reports present a strong case for crowning baby boomers as the greatest victims of the recession and its grim aftermath.


These Americans in their 50s and early 60s — those near retirement age who do not yet have access to Medicare and Social Security — have lost the most earnings power of any age group, with their household incomes 10 percent below what they made when the recovery began three years ago, according to Sentier Research, a data analysis company.


(Read More: Over the Hill at Work: Why 50 May Be the New 70)


Their retirement savings and home values fell sharply at the worst possible time: just before they needed to cash out. They are supporting both aged parents and unemployed young-adult children, earning them the inauspicious nickname “Generation Squeeze.”


New research suggests that they may die sooner, because their health, income security and mental well-being were battered by recession at a crucial time in their lives. A recent study by economists at Wellesley College found that people who lost their jobs in the few years before becoming eligible for Social Security lost up to three years from their life expectancy, largely because they no longer had access to affordable health care.


“If I break my wrist, I lose my house,” said Susan Zimmerman, 62, a freelance writer in Cleveland, of the distress that a medical emergency would wreak upon her finances and her quality of life. None of the three part-time jobs she has cobbled together pay benefits, and she says she is counting the days until she becomes eligible for Medicare.


In the meantime, Ms. Zimmerman has fashioned her own regimen of home remedies — including eating blue cheese instead of taking penicillin and consuming plenty of orange juice, red wine, coffee and whatever else the latest longevity studies recommend — to maintain her health, which she must do if she wants to continue paying the bills.


“I will probably be working until I’m 100,” she said.


As common as that sentiment is, the job market has been especially unkind to older workers.


(Read More: Economy Feeds on Workers Who Delay Retirement)


Unemployment rates for Americans nearing retirement are far lower than those for young people, who are recently out of school, with fewer skills and a shorter work history. But once out of a job, older workers have a much harder time finding another one. Over the last year, the average duration of unemployment for older people was 53 weeks, compared with 19 weeks for teenagers, according to the Labor Department’s jobs report released on Friday.


The lengthy process is partly because older workers are more likely to have been laid off from industries that are downsizing, like manufacturing. Compared with the rest of the population, older people are also more likely to own their own homes and be less mobile than renters, who can move to new job markets.


Older workers are more likely to have a disability of some sort, perhaps limiting the range of jobs that offer realistic choices. They may also be less inclined, at least initially, to take jobs that pay far less than their old positions.


Displaced boomers also believe they are victims of age discrimination, because employers can easily find a young, energetic worker who will accept lower pay and who can potentially stick around for decades rather than a few years.


“When you’re older, they just see gray hair and they write you off,” said Arynita Armstrong, 60, of Willis, Tex. She has been looking for work for five years since losing her job at a mortgage company. “They’re afraid to hire you, because they think you’re a health risk. You know, you might make their premiums go up. They think it’ll cost more money to invest in training you than it’s worth it because you might retire in five years.


“Not that they say any of this to your face,” she added.


When older workers do find re-employment, the compensation is usually not up to the level of their previous jobs, according to data from the Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers University.


In a survey by the center of older workers who were laid off during the recession, just one in six had found another job, and half of that group had accepted pay cuts. Fourteen percent of the re-employed said the pay in their new job was less than half what they earned in their previous job.


“I just say to myself: ‘Why me? What have I done to deserve this?’ ” said John Agati, 56, of Norwalk, Conn., whose last full-time job, as a merchandise buyer and product developer, ended four years ago when his employer went out of business.


That position paid $90,000, and his rsum lists stints at companies like American Express, Disney and USA Networks. Since being laid off, though, he has worked a series of part-time, low-wage, temporary positions, including selling shoes at Lord & Taylor and making sales calls for a limo company.


The last few years have taken a toll not only on his family’s finances, but also on his feelings of self-worth.


(Read More: Boomers’ Average Nest Egg Is $500,000 Short: Study)


“You just get sad,” Mr. Agati said. “I see people getting up in the morning, going out to their careers and going home. I just wish I was doing that. Some people don’t like their jobs, or they have problems with their jobs, but at least they’re working. I just wish I was in their shoes.”


He said he cannot afford to go back to school, as many younger people without jobs have done. Even if he could afford it, economists say it is unclear whether older workers like him benefit much from more education.


“It just doesn’t make sense to offer retraining for people 55 and older,” said Daniel Hamermesh, an economics professor at the University of Texas in Austin. “Discrimination by age, long-term unemployment, the fact that they’re now at the end of the hiring queue, the lack of time horizon just does not make it sensible to invest in them.”


Many displaced older workers are taking this message to heart and leaving the labor force entirely.


The share of older people applying for Social Security early spiked during the recession as people sought whatever income they could find. The penalty they will pay is permanent, as retirees who take benefits at age 62 — as Ms. Zimmerman did, to help make her mortgage payments — will receive 30 percent less in each month’s check for the rest of their lives than they would if they had waited until full retirement age (66 for those born after 1942).


Those not yet eligible for Social Security are increasingly applying for another, comparable kind of income support that often goes to people who expect never to work again: disability benefits. More than one in eight people in their late 50s is now on some form of federal disability insurance program, according to Mark Duggan, chairman of the department of business economics and public policy at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.


(Read More: What Dow 14,000 Means for Your Retirement Plan)


The very oldest Americans, of course, were battered by some of the same ill winds that tormented those now nearing retirement, but at least the most senior were cushioned by a more readily available social safety net. More important, in a statistical twist, they may have actually benefited from the financial crisis in the most fundamental way: prolonged lives.


Death rates for people over 65 have historically fallen during recessions, according to a November 2011 study by economists at the University of California, Davis. Why? The researchers argue that weak job markets push more workers into accepting relatively undesirable work at nursing homes, leading to better care for residents.


(Read More: Unemployment Rises, More Quit Looking for Work)

Elon Musk forms several ‘X Holdings’ companies to fund potential Twitter buyout

3 Mins Read

Thursday’s filing dispelled some doubts, though Musk still has work to do. He and his advisers will spend the coming days vetting potential investors for the equity portion of his offer, according to people familiar with the matter

 Daily Newsletter

KV Prasad Journo follow politics, process in Parliament and US Congress. Former Congressional APSA-Fulbright Fellow

Previous Article

Oil Fluctuates as Traders Assess China’s Vow, Unrest in Libya

Next Article

Shanghai residents turn to NFTs to record COVID lockdown, combat censorship

LIVE TV

today's market

index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -72.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +28.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +30.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -14.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95
index Price Change
nifty 50 ₹16,986.00 -7.15
sensex ₹1,882.60 +8.30
nifty IT ₹2,206.80 +3.85
nifty bank ₹1,318.95 -1.95

Currency

Company Price Chng %Chng
Dollar-Rupee 73.3500 0.0000 0.00
Euro-Rupee 89.0980 0.0100 0.01
Pound-Rupee 103.6360 -0.0750 -0.07
Rupee-100 Yen 0.6734 -0.0003 -0.05
Quiz
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Are you a Crypto Head? It’s time to prove it!
10 Questions · 5 Minutes
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Win WRX (WazirX token) worth Rs. 1500.
Question 1 of 5

What coins do you think will be valuable over next 3 years?

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Should Elon Musk be able to buy Twitter?