| | NEW YORK (Reuters) - A cute Maltipoo puppy could never harm anyone, right? | |
| NEW YORK (Reuters) - Loomis Sayles vice chairman Dan Fuss says the 10-year Treasury yield could go "north of 4 percent" within two years, but geopolitical risks and economic deterioration could keep yields lower. | |
| NEW YORK (Reuters) - Financial firms representing more than $1 trillion in assets under management have endorsed a U.S. regulator's plan to test limiting the rebates and other incentives that stock exchanges can pay to brokers, a practice critics say creates conflicts of interest. | |
| (Reuters) - A fund industry trade group representative on Monday disputed the idea that bond exchange-traded funds (ETFs) might fail to hold up under stress, telling U.S. securities regulators he knows of no convincing evidence to suggest such funds' liquidity is a problem. | |
| NEW YORK (Reuters) - Foreign investors and central banks purchased fewer U.S. Treasuries in late March when the government sold a record high $294 billion of debt securities, Treasury Department data released on Monday showed. | |
| BOSTON (Reuters) - Proxy advisor Institutional Shareholder Services on Friday recommended investors vote against a stock plan for employees at Goldman Sachs Group Inc, concerned about its costs and the bank's heavy use of stock-based compensation. | |
| (Reuters) - Proxy advisory firm Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) on Friday recommended Wells Fargo & Co shareholders vote for all Wells Fargo board nominees at the bank's annual meeting on April 24. | |
| BOSTON (Reuters) - BlackRock Inc, the world's largest asset manager, said on Thursday it will offer new investment strategies and exchange-traded funds that exclude civilian firearms producers and retailers, following through on plans it outlined last month after a Florida high school massacre. | |
| NEW YORK (Reuters) - Dan Ivascyn, group chief investment officer at Pacific Investment Management Co, said on Wednesday that late-cycle deficit spending "increases the risk of an eventual hard landing for the U.S. economy by forcing the Federal Reserve to be more proactive." | |
| NEW YORK (Reuters) - With the recent demise of Stephen Hawking, humanity lost one of its greatest minds, someone able to contemplate the deepest and most perplexing mysteries of life and the universe. | |
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