To say that 2020 has been a crazy year would be an understatement! It feels like our world has been turned upside down.
Some of you have lost income, hours, or even your jobs because of the pandemic. Those financial goals you made on January 1st are out the window, because you're focused on covering your basic needs. I know it might feel like there's no point in setting new goals for yourself, but here's the thing: There are things you can control when it comes to getting your finances in order.
Not to change the topic here:
Opinion | College Football's Return: It's About the Money - The New York Times
Re " The Big Ten Failed a Moral Test. Your Move, Pac-12, " by Kurt Streeter (Sports of The Times, Sept. 18):
The conference commissioner said the decision by the Big Ten universities to reverse their earlier decision and play football this fall was "to return to competition so all student-athletes can realize their dream of competing in the sports they love."
But as of the moment, members of the men's and women's cross-country teams, the women's field hockey and volleyball teams and other so-called non-revenue sports won't be having their dreams realized this fall. Don't these student-athletes want to compete in the sports they love?
Money Reimagined: Climate-Friendlier Crypto
Sadly, the overlap between people working in crypto and people working to contain climate change is small. But the reality is that the future of cryptocurrencies and the future of our planet's climate are closely intertwined.
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Climate change is a global problem that transcends borders, yet as Californians and Oregonians learned from this month's wildfires it delivers highly localized effects. It is, in other words, a decentralized phenomenon, one the existing centralized hierarchies of nation-states have spectacularly failed to contain.
SEC Says Ex-Transamerica Rep Used Client Money to Pay His Own Bills | ThinkAdvisor
They are underused but could become more popular with more holistic planning and offerings from retirement providers, Cerulli says.
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Annuity fee structures are changing, and so are macro trends for advisors and clients, Morningstar panelists say.
As your firm explores how to best utilize it’s troves of client data, back-office access to this data has remained limited. Learn how back-office access to data can help you grow your business.
While you're here, how about this:
Hawaii Has Spent Only A Small Fraction Of CARES Act Money
New data released Wednesday by Gov. David Ige’s administration shows the state and the three neighbor island counties together have spent only about 8% of the federal CARES Act funding that the governor’s office received in April.
The money is supposed to help state and local government to cope with the coronavirus pandemic. All of that funding — $862.8 million as of Aug. 30 — must be spent by the end of this year or it will have to be returned to the federal government. But so far, only $71 million has been spent.
Erie County pays back employees with CARES Act money | Sandusky Register Commissioners issuing
Kirkwood 10-year-old sells $20,000 in homemade masks, pours money into local businesses | News
On the Money: Administration to ban TikTok, WeChat | House moves toward bill to avoid government
Happy Friday and welcome back to On The Money. I'm Niv Elis, filling in for Sylvan Lane, with your nightly guide to everything affecting your bills, bank account and bottom line.
Write us with tips, suggestions and news: slane@thehill.com, njagoda@thehill.com and nelis@thehill.com. Follow us on Twitter: @SylvanLane, @NJagoda and @NivElis.
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The Trump administration announced Friday that it will ban WeChat and TikTok from U.S. app stores starting Sunday. The order is a significant escalation against the two Chinese-owned apps that have massive user bases in the U.S.
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