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May 22, 2012 1:25 AM EDT
A Line In The Sand

After a three day break from the string of losses on Wall Street, calmer heads prevailed. In Europe, the economic fears eased a bit. Spain sold 6 billion Euros of 10-year government bonds with a bid to cover just over 2.1. There were also comments by the French Economy Minister, Christine Lagarde, saying that European banks would pass the “stress test”, although many analysts are upset over the fact that the details of how some of these measur... full story >>


Top Stories

Bill Mann's Canada: Canadian Pacific proxy fight a turning point

The stockholder showdown at Canadian Pacific Railway’s annual meeting, which led to the ouster of the railroad’s top two execs, marked an important turning point in the way Canadian corporate board members are likely to deal with impatient stockholders, especially the major ones.



Where the stock and bond bargains are hiding

Both the safest and the riskiest assets are overbought. Jack Hough hunts for the best deals in the middle.



Paul B. Farrell: How Facebook could destroy the U.S. economy

Global economy-killer? Yes, Facebook joins my list of global macroeconomic triggers (deadly unpredictable Black Swans like the dot-coms in 2000, subprimes in 2008) that the denial system driving the collective brain of American investors will simply tune out, till it’s too late. Till a crash takes the economy down again.



TaxWatch: Are tax-free education accounts right for you?

Is it still a good idea to put money into specialized accounts that avoid taxes, but don’t provide a current tax deduction? Section 529 plans and Coverdell Education Savings Accounts come with penalties and restrictions on the use of the funds. With today’s rate of return, would you be better off with unrestricted savings?





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