Friday, August 14, 2009
Financialone's review
We all know that we are in an economic crisis so we need to keep our finances secure always so that we can use them for our future use. Now a days there are lot of options with people to keep their finances protested but the best and the easiest manner in which people can insure their money is Financial One's online life insurance shopping system is really a fast and instant way of life insurance when compared to other companies. The main feature which attracts Financial One is that we can check the rates of all the companies at one instant. Though this life insurance online may look complicated one but it has been made easy by FinancialOne.Com as they provide with real time interest rates which will help a lot. There are lot of benefits which you can have from FinancialOne.Com as they have all the information which is required like quoting term life insurance and return of premium life insurance. It also helps in the auto insurance as they give us the various information and articles regarding inexpensive vehicles which are present in the market. Thus FinancialOne.Com provides all the information which is needed in any life insurance of any product.
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
S.Korea's fin min admits depth of downturn
South Korea's new finance minister gave up his predecessor's rosy economic targets soon after taking office on Tuesday and pledged to try hard to recover confidence from investors toward the country's economic policy.Yoon Jeung-hyun, 62, a former financial regulator, said he felt uneasy to admit that Asia's fourth-largest economy will contract this year for the first time in 11 years but added winning investors' confidence was more important.
Saturday, February 7, 2009
RBS to pay staff £1 billion in bonuses
The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) is proposing to pay close to £1 billion in bonuses to its staff, just months after it was rescued by a £20 billion taxpayer bail-out,. RBS, which has a new chairman and chief executive in place of their sacked predecessors, is sensitive to accusations that it is paying “rewards for failure”. Stephen Hester, the new boss, will give evidence to the Commons Treasury select committee on Wednesday, when he is likely to be questioned about the bonuses.
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Japan carmakers to lose money
Japanese automakers are looking at an ugly third-quarter earnings season that will almost certainly include profit warnings from Nissan Motor Co and others that have not updated their outlooks in the past three months as global vehicle demand shows no sign of reviving.Even Honda Motor Co which slashed its forecasts in mid-December, could lower its annual outlook for a fourth time after outlining more production cuts at home for the business year ending on March 31.With production and sales in various markets plumbing multi-decade lows in recent months, operating losses at the top three Toyota Motor Corp, Honda and Nissan.
Labels:
automakers,
Honda Motor Co,
Nissan Motor Co
Boeing posts quarterly loss
Boeing Co reported an unexpected fourth-quarter loss on Wednesday due to a strike by its assembly workers and larger-than-anticipated charges for delays on its new 747 jumbo.The plane maker and defense contractor also forecast 2009 earnings well below Wall Street estimates as it grapples with a dip in demand for its planes as airlines feel the pain of recession.Its shares fell slightly in light premarket trading to $43.02 from Tuesday's close at $43.22 on the New York Stock Exchange.Boeing, which lost out to rival Airbus in the race for plane orders last year, reported a quarterly loss of $56 million, or 8 cents per share, compared with a year-earlier profit of $1.03 billion, or $1.36 per share.
Labels:
Airbus,
airlines,
Boeing,
New York Stock Exchange
Saturday, January 24, 2009
Toyota Japan output to drop 60 percent
Toyota Motor Corp plans to reduce vehicle production in Japan by nearly 60 percent in April, a level that could force it to cut its domestic workforce amid slumping car sales.Toyota, the world's biggest automaker, is whittling down its non-permanent workforce by letting contracts expire, but executives have said they intend to leave full-time staff untouched despite unprecedented factory suspensions in Japan.
Friday, January 23, 2009
GE profit down 44 percent
General Electric Co reported a 44 percent drop in quarterly profit on weakness at GE Capital and its lighting and appliance units, as the U.S. conglomerate and economic bellwether closed out one of the toughest years in its 117-year history.Despite meeting Wall Street's lowered estimates, earnings at the company's GE Capital finance arm its Achilles heel for the past year stumbled 67 percent. Its energy infrastructure unit, which makes electric turbines and windmills, was the highlight, recording 11 percent profit growth.
Labels:
economic crisis.,
General Electric,
Wall Street
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