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Friday, December 22, 2017
Ski slopes and beaches forgotten: tax takes precedence
NEW YORK (Reuters) - There will be no holiday slowdown this year for tax consultant Jonathan Traub, who skipped hitting the ski slopes with his family and hunkered down in his Colorado condo to prep for a webcast.
A Model Life: How Petra Nemcova transformed tragedy into joy
NEW YORK (Reuters) - If Petra Nemcova's life were a movie plot, nobody would believe it.
U.S.-based equity funds post $22 billion of outflows, largest withdrawals in 2017
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S.-based equity funds posted $22.2 billion of outflows in the week ended Dec. 20, the largest cash withdrawals for 2017, according to Lipper data on Thursday.
Column: With U.S. life expectancy gains down, tax bill will make things worse
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The Republican tax bill approved by Congress this week will create financial headaches for millions of taxpayers trying to navigate all the new rates and rules.
Your Money: Get ready for a flood of difficult divorces in 2018
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Acrimonious couples who were racing to get divorced by Dec. 31 or face dire tax consequences can breathe a sigh of relief. The final tax overhaul bill gives them until the end of 2018 before completely upending the divorce process.
U.S. tax overhaul requires new math for 529 savings plans
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Families with children in private or parochial school will be able to tap their college savings plans to pay for up to $10,000 in tuition and other expenses in the new year, thanks to a provision in the tax overhaul bill going into effect in 2018.
Tax bill's 'pass-through' rule will aid wealthy, not workers: critics
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Wealthy business owners, such as President Donald Trump, stand to gain from a provision in the Republican tax bill that creates a valuable deduction for owners of pass-through businesses, Democrats and some tax experts say.
Column: Student tax breaks survive the tax bill, make the most of them
CHICAGO (Reuters) - If you are going to college, getting extra training for a job, or paying off student loans, there are myriad tax breaks worth thousands of dollars to people burdened by college costs.
Work hard, play hard: Life lessons from Sammy Hagar
(The writer is a Reuters contributor. The opinions expressed are his own.)
Hurricane-hit catastrophe bond managers plan new funds
LONDON (Reuters) - Hedge funds and other managers of catastrophe bond funds racked up some of the worst losses in more than a decade from this year's hurricanes and wildfires.
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