The odd couple: Xtra Factor's Konnie Huq engaged to comedian …

Posted by on June 13th, 2010

The former Blue Peter presenter Konnie Huq is engaged to acid-tongued comedian and Guardian reviewer Charlie Brooker, according to the latest reports from the entertainment world.

Konnie in her days as a Blue Peter presenter

Huq, 34, and Brooker, 39, met a number of years ago, but have only been dating for around nine months. Their relationship has been very low-key, which is why the news that they are to marry has come as such a surprise to many in the industry.

The couple seem to be the embodiment of the ‘opposites attract’ adage; Cambridge graduate Huq is best known as a fresh-faced Blue Peter presenter (her most high-profile relationship to date being with co-presenter Richard Bacon) whilst Brooker has a massive youth following for his savage, satirical humour and foul-mouthed cynicism. despite their obvious differences, a friend of Konnie’s is quoted in the Mirror as saying:

“They are so happy together and very much in love. they got engaged a couple of weeks ago but wanted to keep it quiet.”

Xtra Factor

The news of their engagement also coincides with the announcement that Konnie Huq is to take over from Holly Willoughby as the host of the Xtra Factor for the next X Factor series, the first auditions for which are starting this week in Glasgow.

Her new job as part of the X Factor team means that Konnie will no longer be able to accompany Charlie on their planned trip to America, where the pair of joked of a quickie wedding in Las Vegas.

The odd couple: Xtra Factor's Konnie Huq engaged to comedian …

President Obama Signs Haiti Debt Relief Bill Authored by Congresswoman Waters …

Posted by on April 29th, 2010

Washington, DC the Debt Relief for Earthquake Recovery in Haiti Act (H.R. 4573) authored by Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-CA) was signed into law by President Barack Obama Monday at the White House. the bill, which would help relieve Haiti of hundreds of millions of dollars in debt owed to multilateral institutions, recently passed both chambers of Congress, and is now classified as Public Law No: 111-158.

The Presidents signature on this bill is further indication of the United States support for the people of Haiti, said Congresswoman Waters. I authored this legislation because Haitis immense debt burden would have severely impeded the countrys recovery efforts. our government will work closely with the multilateral development institutions to ensure that they cancel all of Haitis debts owed to them, and that future aid over the next few years is delivered in the form of grants, so that Haiti does not accumulate more debt.

Public Law No: 111-158 directs the Secretary of the Treasury to instruct the U.S. Executive Directors at the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other multilateral development institutions to use the voice, vote, and influence of the United States to do the following:

1. cancel immediately and completely all debt owed by Haiti to these institutions; 2. suspend Haitis debt service payments to the institutions until the debt is canceled completely; and3. provide additional assistance to Haiti in the form of grants so that Haiti does not accumulate additional debt.

Public Law No: 111-158 also directs the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of State to use all appropriate diplomatic influence to secure the cancellation of all remaining bilateral, multilateral, and private creditor debt owed by Haiti. A Senate amendment included in the House bill specifies that Haiti should receive aid in the form of grants until February 1, 2015. after that time, multilateral development institutions may resume aid in the form of new loans.

Congresswoman Waters, who serves on the Financial Services Subcommittee on International Monetary Policy and Trade, participated in a hearing today on promoting small and micro enterprise in Haiti.

Congresswoman Waters said, to help Haiti move forward, I am focused on making sure that durable forms of shelter continue to be delivered and distributed to the millions of survivors living in the camps for the displaced, so that they stay dry and protected from disease during the impending rainy season. Additionally, I will be assisting Haitian small business people and nongovernmental organizations in forming partnerships with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) so that they have a substantive role in the rebuilding of their country.

President Obama Signs Haiti Debt Relief Bill Authored by Congresswoman Waters …

Three sure-fire ways to fail financially

Posted by on March 1st, 2010

The following article was written by Griff Hanning – the owner and founder of FinancialSecrets101.com. He has a passion for helping others attain financial freedom and maximize the amount of time and money they have to help advance God’s Kingdom.

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CPF is a blog meant to help readers make, save, grow, and give money, while getting started on their journey to financial freedom.

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1. Spend over 1/3 of your income on a house or an apartment.

Most people dream of living in a house with over 5,000 square feet and located in one of the nicest parts of town. I mean, who wouldn’t want to wake up every morning to a little bit of luxury?

The problem with living large is that money is usually in limited supply. If you are spending 40% to 50% of your income on your mortgage or rent, you’re not going to have a whole lot left over at the end of the month.

You may be thinking, “So what. I’m getting by just fine.”

OK, I have two issues with this kind of attitude. the first is about “getting by.” do you really want to live life just getting by? Wouldn’t you rather be thriving? I would.

The second issue I have with that kind of attitude is that you never know what the future may hold. You may be making the payments just fine today, but what if you got laid off tomorrow?

Mortgages and rent are some of the largest stand-alone expenses for consumers. If you want to fail, choose payments that are more than 30% of your income.

2. Wait until tomorrow to make changes.

It doesn’t matter what good financial advice we are talking about here, if you keep telling yourself that you will start tomorrow, you’ll wake up one day and be a broke 70-year-old wishing you could start over. Don’t take my word for it! go ask your grandparents what they wish they would have done better in regards to their finances. You’ll know exactly what I’m talking about.

I was sitting in a Bible study last year with Dr. Del Tackett, author of the Truth Project from Focus on the Family. We invited him to come share some of his wisdom with us “young bucks”, not knowing what he was going to talk about when he got there. He chose to talk about the difference between knowing and believing.

He used the coffee table and center-piece as an analogy. the coffee table surface represented our minds with all of our “nuggets” of knowledge scattered about. the small tea candles represented the nuggets of knowledge that we daily acquire and keep stored away. the center piece was a bowl-like decoration that he used to represent our heart- where we place the things that we believe.

As Del was talking he started taking some of the candles from the table and placing them in the bowl. He explained that the only way to move a nugget of knowledge from our minds to our hearts is through believing – and the only way to believe is to act on your belief.

This concept is convicting not only for living out your faith as a Christian, but also acting upon the good advice we know in other areas of our lives, like money. You may KNOW that saving money for a rainy day is a good idea, but do you BELIEVE it? You may know that investing money when you are young is extremely important, but do you believe it?

If you want to fail financially, keep putting off the things you know you should do until tomorrow.

3. Stay where you are.

I believe that financial freedom is attainable. I think this can only come through finding contentment with where you are at in life and implementing wise money-saving techniques. but I also know that you can always improve your financial situation.

An excuse I hear all of the time is, “Well, our needs are met, what more do we need?” yes! these people are right. That’s a good place to be and an OK attitude to have. In fact, people like this are head and shoulders above others. but then I ask them, “Wouldn’t you like to maximize your financial freedom by becoming a more generous giver of your time and money than you ever thought possible?! Doesn’t that sound a little more fun than just being self focused and responsible with your finances?”

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Three sure-fire ways to fail financially

Search Stocks & The Stock Crash: GOOG, YHOO & MSFT

Posted by on February 16th, 2010

Today John Battelle noted what a plunge Google took on the stock market yesterday and in general through the currentyear. I thought it would be fun to look at Microsoft and Yahoo as well.

The chart above covers the past month and shows Google (GOOG),Yahoo (YHOO),and Microsoft (MSFT)against the NASDAQ over the past month. Of the three, Google’s had the greatestdecline, down 19.5 percent. Yahoo’s just behind at 18.5 percent, with Microsoftat about 12.5 percent. The NASDAQ overall is at 15.5 percent.

No doubt, it’s a drop — but rather than being Google-specific, it seems moretied to the overall decline in stock prices. That doesn’t negate the point Johnmakes — that Googlers do watch the stock price, and the drop will concern many,especially those “underwater” with options to buy the stock at a price higherthan it is currently trading.

The dollar figures for yesterday:

  • Google: Opened at $562.03, closed at $584.35, up 4 percent.Currently: $566.81
  • Yahoo: Opened at $19.29, closed at $19.86, up 3 percent. Currently:$19.75
  • Microsoft: Opened at $31.54, closed at $31.96, up 1.3 percent.Currently: $31.82

Postscript: see Day 2: Search Stocks & is Search Recession Proof? for a second day look.

Search Stocks & The Stock Crash: GOOG, YHOO & MSFT

Personal Finance Software – The best Ranking Personal Finance Software

Posted by on January 26th, 2010

Personal finance software enables anybody that wants to better manage their personal finances to easily manage them. why is a personal finance software right for you? if you are interested in a complete examination of your personal finances culminating to future financial goals, then personal finance software can help you realize that target.

The best personal finance software are listed below for examination.

Quicken – a very recognizable software, Quicken is one of the most widely used finance management software on the market. It has been around for a very long time. 1984 is when the first version of quicken made its introduction in the computing world. Quicken Starter Edition 2009 is the software we are concerned about in this article. The program is a breeze to install and comes with many financial calculators as well as a well thought out banking section. Your data can be stored in safe servers for a small yearly fee. Our best pick of the lot.

Acemoney 3.10.1 – Acemoney 3.10.1 is yet another stellar offering on the market. its clean and intuitive interface enables even beginners to get to work. all the most important languages are supported such as Chinese to French. Online payment to your bank account is possible with Acemoney. While lacking in the tools section, the intuitive interface makes utilizing Acemoney very simple.

Moneydance 2008 – Moneydance started life as an open source personal finance software. in terms of features, it beats out Acemoney but isn’t quite as user friendly. Like Acemoney, Moneydance enables syncing with your bank accounts. Bank transfers and deposits are easily done, as are online bill payments which is a free service. Moneydance works in all three major operating systems, Linux, MacOS and Windows.

Banktree Personal 2.0 – BankTree personal 2.0 rounds off the best personal finance software in evaluation. Banking through this software is available as well as the downloading of financial data form those accounts. It has most of the standard features found on the rest of our picks such as creating budgets, payrolls etc. Online bill payment is offered but is not free. The only two financial calculators offered are for loans and mortgages.

Personal Finance Advice and Financial planning Tips are two major fields of importance for the author of this article. Prema de Silva operates a free useful personal finance portal in her spare time. She has been trading stocks for more than 7 years.

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Personal Finance Software – The best Ranking Personal Finance Software

Jobs for Bloggers – ProBlogger Job Board – Credit / Personal …

Posted by on January 14th, 2010

We are looking for a writer who can produce 3 – 5 credit and personal finance articles a week. we would like these articles to focused on credit cards, credit card reviews and news posts that cover the credit industry.

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Jobs for Bloggers – ProBlogger Job Board – Credit / Personal …

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Jobs for Bloggers – ProBlogger Job Board – Credit / Personal …

Loans backed by assets thrive as cheaper funding vanishes

Posted by on January 12th, 2010

The economy has slowed, credit quality is suffering, and lenders must pick and choose customers carefully.

The perfect time for an asset-based loan? Asset-based lenders certainly think so.

It is clearly our day in the sun. There’s no doubt about it, said Joyce White, president of Bank of America Business Capital. There’s less liquidity in the markets, and you also are starting to see companies have problems. Those two issues are creating a need for asset-based lending.

The market for asset-based lending (ABL) totaled $545 billion in loans outstanding as of the end of June of this year, an 11% increase over 2007, according to the Commercial Finance Association, an industry group. And Reuters Loan Pricing Corp. data show asset-based loans have held up fairly well in a down market, with $16.5 billion in new ABL syndicated loans made in the first half, compared with about $13 billion at the same time last year.

The only question is whether lenders can afford to keep making asset-based loans when struggling companies need them the most. CIT Group, for example, said earlier this year that it was cutting back to preserve as much capital as possible. A spokesman confirmed in an e-mail that CIT is being more selective.

Other lenders, however, are optimistic the numbers will hold.

Capital is an issue in all businesses, said Sal Settineri, a managing director with GE Capital Markets, but generally speaking, this market continues to be open for business. For anyone out there who’s trying to get a deal done, the asset-based structure is a focal point, because a company may not otherwise be able to get that loan done in the traditional leveraged loan market. The liquidity might not be there.

Ms. White said there should be opportunities through the rest of this year and into 2009. Based on what we’ve seen year to date, we should see above-average levels of activity, particularly if the economy stays where it is or continues to slow.

Asset-based loans use working capital, receivables, inventory and equipment as collateral instead of cash flow. Typically used by distressed companies, they require more rigorous reporting to the lender and are more expensive than cash-flow loans for the more creditworthy.

ABL loans have become more expensive recently: The average rate on ABL loans was about 234 basis points over Libor in the second quarter, up from 162 basis points in the same period last year, according to Reuters Loan Pricing Corp.

For a company that’s facing hard times and needs as much credit as it can get, higher rates are the trade-off, said Carlos Evans, head of wholesale banking at Wachovia. Though ABL loans are only about 10% of the entire commercial and industrial (C&I) portfolio at Wachovia now, he said, I would say the outlook for ABL is pretty robust. Overall, though, he expects C&I loan growth at Wachovia to slow, after holding up through the second quarter.

Ms. White of B of A, Mr. Settineri of GE Capital and Mr. Evans all declined to provide specific growth estimates for ABL, but they did offer some anecdotal observations: Ms. White noted that she’s seeing fewer $1 billion-plus deals, and more middle-market to upper-middle-market ones. Mr. Evans said he sees more demand from exporters, who want to take advantage of a weaker dollar. And all agreed that, unsurprisingly, housing sector companies are excellent customers.

Still, with the strength of existing banking capital in doubt, there are questions about the ongoing availability of asset-based loans. The rising cost of funds surely makes capital a precious commodity. For example, the yield on Standard & Poor’s composite index for five-year bank bonds was 7% as of Aug. 20, up from 6.5% at the end of June. The five-year Treasury yield fell 35 basis points over the same period, to 3%.

Bank balance sheets are constrained, said Maria Dikeos, a senior market analyst at Thomson Reuters. It’s not such a given anymore that the traditional ABL lenders will be able to lend with the same capacity that they have in previous down cycles.

A lot may be riding on how much ABL lending they can actually do, say some economy watchers. if banks knock down all the loans that come into them, you will have a recession, said Dick Bove, a banking analyst at Ladenburg Thalmann. if they make some of these loans, everybody benefits.

Loans backed by assets thrive as cheaper funding vanishes

News from the account aggregation front

Posted by on December 22nd, 2009

I met with Tom Roberts last week; he’s the general manager of wealth management at CashEdge inc.

I’ve been fascinated with automated client data aggregation technology, which is what CashEdge has provided for years now.

It seems like such a no-brainer for advisers who want to build their practices because it gives them a window into a client’s held-away assets so they can provide more holistic guidance.

With some many accounts in clients’ portfolios these days, including annuities, brokerage accounts, cash, insurance plans, mortgages retirement plans, and on and on, it makes sense to have a dedicated provider doing the heavy lifting.

A small — and admittedly self-serving — survey published by CashEdge earlier this month provides some interesting insights.

The company polled 120 active advisers who have been in the business at least five years. Surprisingly, 92% of respondents said they had received an unsolicited inquiry from a client about account aggregation.

In addition, 91% said they are already performing some level of account aggregation for their clients. Of those, 58% are aggregating client account information manually from paper records — and nearly half these reported spending 11 hours or more per month on the process.

Also, 88% of the advisers that responded do provide advice on held-away assets, but only 40% of them are charging fees for it.

In case you were wondering: about 59% of the respondents in the CashEdge survey described themselves as RIAs, 29% were affiliated with independent broker-dealers and 12% were wirehouse advisers.

Background and prognostication

CashEdge is just one of several players in the field, which also includes Advent Custodial Data from Advent Software inc. and ByAllAccounts, among others.

Each account aggregation platform collects data in its own way.

The first and least reliable method is HTML harvesting, also known as “screen scraping,” where the aggregation company’s software logs into a client’s account using their login ID and password, and copies the financial data from web pages. While the screen scraping method gathers only basic portfolio data, it is probably adequate for advisers who create simple financial plans.

Screen scraping may be rendered obsolete, however by increased security hurdles at custodians, the guardians and repositories of the data.

For example, multifactor authentication requirements — having to provide a second bit of information in addition to a password — can trip up the way some of the aggregators work.

That means that providers are going to have to rely more on direct feeds from the custodians themselves. these feeds number in the thousands.

For the consumer and maybe soon the adviser too

Next year, or by 2011, advisers probably will be able to see aggregated data provided by the likes of Mint.com, now owned by Intuit Corp. or more directly from the likes of Yodlee inc., which performs the data aggregation for the Mint.com service.

Yodlee, while generally perceived as fitting only in the personal finance realm, also supplies its data to many large financial services companies. the company has over 23 million registered users.

I recently spoke with Joe Polverari, senior vice president at Yodlee who told me about some of the work they are currently doing.

“Financial advisers of every size and scope have a need for this data,” he said.

About 60% of Yodlee’s data comes in the form of direct data feeds from custodians and the remaining 40% as a result of HTML data gathering.

“Our perspective is that our core competency is in unifying all this data and by the time and by the time we are done we have gotten it from about 120,000 types of accounts,” he said.

The company has introduced a software development kit for Yodlee 10, the latest version of its personal finance platform.

“All the Yodlee solutions all communicate to one another, whether bill payment or account balance, all of it sits under the Yodlee platform and what we have put on top of the platform of Yodlee 10 is the ability to customize this,” Mr. Polverari said.

“We are seeing a lot of our banking customers who want to segment all that into different applications,” he explained.

News from the account aggregation front