This document is a quarterly report filed by Health Net, Inc. with the SEC for the quarter ended March 31, 2007. It includes Health Net's unaudited consolidated financial statements for the first quarter of 2007, showing revenues of $3.4 billion, net income of $88.6 million, and basic earnings per share of $0.79. The report also provides information on Health Net's business segments, expenses, cash flows, and accounting policies.
This transcript summarizes a conference call between Centex Corporation executives and financial analysts to discuss the company's financial results for the third quarter of fiscal year 2009. Key points include:
1) Centex reported increased cash flow and cash balances despite weak home sales early in the quarter and significant impairment charges.
2) Home sales and revenue declined significantly year-over-year but showed signs of recovery in December and January with help from incentives.
3) Centex continued reducing costs through layoffs, division consolidation, and overhead cuts while improving construction costs and home quality.
4) While the outlook remains challenging, Centex is focused on restoring profitability through efficient homebuilding and preparing for future land opportunities
This document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation for the period ending December 31, 2006. It includes highlights of consolidated balance sheet items, summaries of invested assets, investment income after taxes, statutory policyholders' surplus, changes in unpaid losses, and worldwide property and casualty underwriting results for 2006 and 2005. Specifically, total invested assets increased to $37.7 billion in 2006 from $34.6 billion in 2005. Net income after taxes from investments was $1.2 billion for property and casualty in 2006. Statutory policyholders' surplus grew to $11.3 billion in 2006 from $8.9 billion in 2005.
The Audit Committee Charter establishes the Audit Committee to assist the Board in overseeing the integrity of Centex's financial statements, compliance with legal and regulatory requirements, auditor qualifications and independence, and performance of internal and independent audits. The Charter outlines the Committee's authority, duties, and responsibilities which include appointing and overseeing the independent auditors, reviewing financial reporting and internal controls, and establishing procedures for complaints regarding accounting or auditing matters.
This document is a quarterly report filed with the SEC by Health Net, Inc. It provides financial statements and other information for the quarter ended June 30, 2008. The report indicates that total revenues for the quarter were $3.8 billion, with net income of $76.7 million. Expenses totaled $3.7 billion. For the six months ended June 30, 2008, total revenues were $7.7 billion and net income was $41 million. The balance sheet lists total assets of $3.6 billion as of June 30, 2008, including $760.6 million in cash and $1.5 billion in investments.
bank of new york mellon corp 3q 08 earningsfinance18
The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation reported third quarter 2008 results. Revenue increased 8% year-over-year excluding certain items. Earnings per share were $0.26, down 54% from the prior year. Assets under management totaled $1.067 trillion and assets under custody/administration were $22.4 trillion. The company continued to exceed merger-related expense and revenue synergy targets. Capital ratios were unchanged from the prior quarter despite mark-to-market losses and a 33% larger balance sheet.
This document is a Form 10-Q quarterly report filed by Health Net, Inc. with the SEC for the quarter ended September 30, 2004. It includes Health Net's condensed consolidated financial statements, with notes, for the periods ended September 30, 2004 and December 31, 2003. The financial statements show that as of September 30, 2004, Health Net had total assets of $3.5 billion including over $600 million in cash and investments, and total liabilities of $2.2 billion including nearly $1 billion in reserves for claims. For the quarter ended September 30, 2004, Health Net reported total revenues of $2.9 billion including $2.4 billion in health plan services premiums and $526 million
This document is a quarterly report filed by Health Net, Inc. with the SEC for the quarter ended March 31, 2007. It includes Health Net's unaudited consolidated financial statements for the first quarter of 2007, showing revenues of $3.4 billion, net income of $88.6 million, and basic earnings per share of $0.79. The report also provides information on Health Net's business segments, expenses, cash flows, and accounting policies.
This transcript summarizes a conference call between Centex Corporation executives and financial analysts to discuss the company's financial results for the third quarter of fiscal year 2009. Key points include:
1) Centex reported increased cash flow and cash balances despite weak home sales early in the quarter and significant impairment charges.
2) Home sales and revenue declined significantly year-over-year but showed signs of recovery in December and January with help from incentives.
3) Centex continued reducing costs through layoffs, division consolidation, and overhead cuts while improving construction costs and home quality.
4) While the outlook remains challenging, Centex is focused on restoring profitability through efficient homebuilding and preparing for future land opportunities
This document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation for the period ending December 31, 2006. It includes highlights of consolidated balance sheet items, summaries of invested assets, investment income after taxes, statutory policyholders' surplus, changes in unpaid losses, and worldwide property and casualty underwriting results for 2006 and 2005. Specifically, total invested assets increased to $37.7 billion in 2006 from $34.6 billion in 2005. Net income after taxes from investments was $1.2 billion for property and casualty in 2006. Statutory policyholders' surplus grew to $11.3 billion in 2006 from $8.9 billion in 2005.
The Audit Committee Charter establishes the Audit Committee to assist the Board in overseeing the integrity of Centex's financial statements, compliance with legal and regulatory requirements, auditor qualifications and independence, and performance of internal and independent audits. The Charter outlines the Committee's authority, duties, and responsibilities which include appointing and overseeing the independent auditors, reviewing financial reporting and internal controls, and establishing procedures for complaints regarding accounting or auditing matters.
This document is a quarterly report filed with the SEC by Health Net, Inc. It provides financial statements and other information for the quarter ended June 30, 2008. The report indicates that total revenues for the quarter were $3.8 billion, with net income of $76.7 million. Expenses totaled $3.7 billion. For the six months ended June 30, 2008, total revenues were $7.7 billion and net income was $41 million. The balance sheet lists total assets of $3.6 billion as of June 30, 2008, including $760.6 million in cash and $1.5 billion in investments.
bank of new york mellon corp 3q 08 earningsfinance18
The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation reported third quarter 2008 results. Revenue increased 8% year-over-year excluding certain items. Earnings per share were $0.26, down 54% from the prior year. Assets under management totaled $1.067 trillion and assets under custody/administration were $22.4 trillion. The company continued to exceed merger-related expense and revenue synergy targets. Capital ratios were unchanged from the prior quarter despite mark-to-market losses and a 33% larger balance sheet.
This document is a Form 10-Q quarterly report filed by Health Net, Inc. with the SEC for the quarter ended September 30, 2004. It includes Health Net's condensed consolidated financial statements, with notes, for the periods ended September 30, 2004 and December 31, 2003. The financial statements show that as of September 30, 2004, Health Net had total assets of $3.5 billion including over $600 million in cash and investments, and total liabilities of $2.2 billion including nearly $1 billion in reserves for claims. For the quarter ended September 30, 2004, Health Net reported total revenues of $2.9 billion including $2.4 billion in health plan services premiums and $526 million
Susan believes her division's purchasing manager gave preferential treatment to new trade partners. She reported this to her director of construction operations, but hasn't received an update in three months despite requests. She's afraid to further report the problem out of fear of losing her job. According to Centex policy, if a concern is not properly addressed, employees should continue following the steps in "What To Do If Issues Arise" by telling higher levels of management, including the division president, Corporate Compliance Office, or Centex's Speak Up Hotline (anonymous reporting). Employees are protected from retaliation for reporting misconduct concerns honestly and in good faith.
Centex Corporation held a presentation at the JPMorgan Basics & Industrial Conference on June 3, 2008. Cathy Smith, CFO of Centex, discussed the company's performance in the previous fiscal year, actions taken to reduce land inventory and improve cash flow, and signs that could indicate a bottoming of the housing market. Some key points included that Centex ended the fiscal year with strong cash generation and a reduced land supply. Centex also improved business processes, focused on overhead reductions, and exited underperforming markets. Cathy Smith argued that falling housing starts, softening land prices, and homebuilders reinvesting could signal an approaching housing bottom.
This document is a SEC Form 10-K annual report filed by Health Net, Inc. for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2000. It provides information on Health Net's business operations, segments, markets, subsidiaries, and regulatory filings. Specifically, it discloses that Health Net operates health plans in 16 states serving over 5.5 million individuals, and has two business segments: Health Plan Services and Government Contracts/Specialty Services. It also notes that Health Net was formed through a 1997 merger between Health Systems International and Foundation Health Corporation.
This document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation for the quarter ending September 30, 2008. It includes a consolidated balance sheet, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets for corporate and property & casualty divisions, and investment income and underwriting results. Beginning in Q3 2008, foreign currency fluctuations will impact property & casualty loss reporting differently than in the past.
Centex Corporation held a homebuilding symposium to discuss the current state of the housing industry and Centex's strategies. The housing market is experiencing a typical downturn with rising foreclosures, slowing economy, and precipitously falling housing starts. Centex is taking immediate actions like reducing land inventory and sales cancellations while conserving cash. Centex is also focusing on restoring profitability through cost reductions and standardized business processes. Centex will allocate capital strategically to markets with the greatest long-term potential and exit those without strong fundamentals to improve margins and returns.
This document provides financial information about Chubb Corporation's property and casualty underwriting results for 2007 and 2006. It summarizes key metrics like net premiums written, losses incurred, expenses incurred, underwriting income, and combined loss/expense ratios for different business lines including personal, commercial, and specialty insurance. It also notes that beginning in 2008, foreign currency fluctuations will be accounted for differently in the reporting of losses paid and outstanding losses. Overall underwriting income increased from $1.886 billion to $2.064 billion from 2006 to 2007.
The document is a letter inviting stockholders to Health Net, Inc.'s 2006 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. It provides details on the date, time, and location of the meeting, and notes that stockholders will vote on electing directors, approving a long-term incentive plan, and ratifying an independent auditor. Stockholders are urged to vote by proxy card, phone, or online in advance of the meeting.
Supplementary Investor Information Y13880_Edgar_992_0333_finance18
The document provides supplementary investor information for The Chubb Corporation for the third quarter of 2005, including:
1) Consolidated balance sheet highlights and summaries of invested assets for both corporate and property/casualty segments.
2) Property/casualty underwriting results for the first nine months of 2005, showing a statutory underwriting income of $293.6 million.
3) Details of changes in net unpaid losses and the estimated impact of catastrophes including Hurricane Katrina of $511 million pre-tax cost.
This document provides supplementary financial information for The Chubb Corporation for the quarter ending March 31, 2005. It includes:
- Consolidated balance sheet highlights showing total invested assets of $31.9 billion.
- Summaries of invested assets by corporate and property/casualty segments.
- Investment income after taxes for corporate and property/casualty segments.
- Property/casualty insurance group statutory surplus of $8.25 billion.
- Changes in net unpaid losses for various lines of business.
- Worldwide underwriting results by line of business, showing a total statutory underwriting income of $134.4 million.
The document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation as of June 30, 2005. It includes:
- Consolidated balance sheet highlights showing total invested assets of $32.9 billion including fixed maturities and equity securities.
- Summaries of invested assets for Chubb's Corporate and Property & Casualty segments totaling over $31 billion.
- Investment income after taxes for the second quarter and first half of 2005, with Property & Casualty investment income of $261 million and $513 million respectively.
- Property & Casualty underwriting results for the second quarter and first half of 2005, including a $4.3 billion statutory policyholders' surplus for the P
The document provides supplementary investor information for The Chubb Corporation as of December 31, 2005. It includes a consolidated balance sheet, details on share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets and investment income for both corporate and property & casualty segments. It also provides property & casualty underwriting results for 2005 and 2004, including net premiums written and earned, losses incurred and expenses by line of business.
This document provides supplementary financial information for The Chubb Corporation as of March 31, 2006. It includes consolidated balance sheet highlights, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets for corporate and property & casualty segments, investment income after taxes, statutory policyholders' surplus, changes in net unpaid losses, and underwriting results for personal, commercial, and specialty insurance lines of business. Key metrics such as loss ratios, expense ratios, and combined ratios are also presented.
This document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation for the period ending June 30, 2006. It includes consolidated balance sheet highlights, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets, investment income after taxes, statutory policyholders' surplus, changes in net unpaid losses, and underwriting results by line of business for year-to-date and quarterly periods. Key metrics such as loss ratios, expense ratios, and combined ratios are presented.
The document provides financial information for The Chubb Corporation as of September 30, 2006. It includes highlights of consolidated balance sheet items, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets and investment income for both corporate and property/casualty segments. Details are also given on property/casualty underwriting results for various lines of business on a year-to-date and quarterly basis, including ratios and comparisons to prior periods. Key terms are defined at the end.
This document provides a summary of financial information for The Chubb Corporation as of March 31, 2007. Some key highlights include:
- Total invested assets were $38.7 billion as of March 31, 2007, with fixed maturities making up the majority.
- Statutory policyholders' surplus for Chubb's property and casualty insurance group was estimated at $11.95 billion as of March 31, 2007, with a ratio of statutory net premiums written to surplus of 1.00 to 1.
- For the three months ended March 31, 2007, Chubb's worldwide property and casualty underwriting results showed a total underwriting income of $202 million for personal insurance and $144 million
This document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation for the period ending June 30, 2007. It includes highlights of Chubb's consolidated balance sheet, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets for Corporate and Property & Casualty segments, and investment income after taxes. Key metrics provided are total invested assets of $39.5 billion, shareholders' equity of $13.8 billion, and year-to-date Property & Casualty investment income of $360 million.
This document provides supplementary investor information for The Chubb Corporation, including consolidated balance sheet highlights, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets, investment income after taxes, statutory policyholders' surplus, changes in net unpaid losses, and underwriting results for both the nine months and quarters ended September 30, 2007 and 2006. Key figures include total invested assets of $40.5 billion, shareholders' equity of $14.2 billion, and worldwide property and casualty underwriting income of $543 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2007.
This document provides supplementary financial information for The Chubb Corporation as of December 31, 2007. It includes highlights of consolidated balance sheets, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets, investment income after taxes for corporate and property/casualty divisions, statutory policyholder surplus, changes in unpaid losses, and underwriting results by line of business for 2007 and 2006.
The document provides supplementary financial information for Chubb Corporation as of March 31, 2008. Key highlights include:
- Total invested assets were $40.1 billion, with fixed maturities making up the majority.
- Statutory policyholders' surplus for property and casualty insurance was estimated at $13.3 billion, with a ratio of net premiums written to surplus of 0.9 to 1.
- For the three months ended March 31, 2008, worldwide underwriting resulted in a total profit of $138 million for commercial lines and $164 million for personal lines. Loss and expense ratios remained high but stable.
The document is a report from The Chubb Corporation detailing changes to how losses are presented in their property and casualty underwriting results. Specifically, beginning in Q3 2008, foreign currency fluctuations will impact "net losses paid" and "increase (decrease) in outstanding losses" differently than before. The report provides definitions, ratios, and quarterly underwriting results for Q1 2008 and 2007 to reflect these presentation modifications. Incurred losses remain unchanged.
Susan believes her division's purchasing manager gave preferential treatment to new trade partners. She reported this to her director of construction operations, but hasn't received an update in three months despite requests. She's afraid to further report the problem out of fear of losing her job. According to Centex policy, if a concern is not properly addressed, employees should continue following the steps in "What To Do If Issues Arise" by telling higher levels of management, including the division president, Corporate Compliance Office, or Centex's Speak Up Hotline (anonymous reporting). Employees are protected from retaliation for reporting misconduct concerns honestly and in good faith.
Centex Corporation held a presentation at the JPMorgan Basics & Industrial Conference on June 3, 2008. Cathy Smith, CFO of Centex, discussed the company's performance in the previous fiscal year, actions taken to reduce land inventory and improve cash flow, and signs that could indicate a bottoming of the housing market. Some key points included that Centex ended the fiscal year with strong cash generation and a reduced land supply. Centex also improved business processes, focused on overhead reductions, and exited underperforming markets. Cathy Smith argued that falling housing starts, softening land prices, and homebuilders reinvesting could signal an approaching housing bottom.
This document is a SEC Form 10-K annual report filed by Health Net, Inc. for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2000. It provides information on Health Net's business operations, segments, markets, subsidiaries, and regulatory filings. Specifically, it discloses that Health Net operates health plans in 16 states serving over 5.5 million individuals, and has two business segments: Health Plan Services and Government Contracts/Specialty Services. It also notes that Health Net was formed through a 1997 merger between Health Systems International and Foundation Health Corporation.
This document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation for the quarter ending September 30, 2008. It includes a consolidated balance sheet, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets for corporate and property & casualty divisions, and investment income and underwriting results. Beginning in Q3 2008, foreign currency fluctuations will impact property & casualty loss reporting differently than in the past.
Centex Corporation held a homebuilding symposium to discuss the current state of the housing industry and Centex's strategies. The housing market is experiencing a typical downturn with rising foreclosures, slowing economy, and precipitously falling housing starts. Centex is taking immediate actions like reducing land inventory and sales cancellations while conserving cash. Centex is also focusing on restoring profitability through cost reductions and standardized business processes. Centex will allocate capital strategically to markets with the greatest long-term potential and exit those without strong fundamentals to improve margins and returns.
This document provides financial information about Chubb Corporation's property and casualty underwriting results for 2007 and 2006. It summarizes key metrics like net premiums written, losses incurred, expenses incurred, underwriting income, and combined loss/expense ratios for different business lines including personal, commercial, and specialty insurance. It also notes that beginning in 2008, foreign currency fluctuations will be accounted for differently in the reporting of losses paid and outstanding losses. Overall underwriting income increased from $1.886 billion to $2.064 billion from 2006 to 2007.
The document is a letter inviting stockholders to Health Net, Inc.'s 2006 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. It provides details on the date, time, and location of the meeting, and notes that stockholders will vote on electing directors, approving a long-term incentive plan, and ratifying an independent auditor. Stockholders are urged to vote by proxy card, phone, or online in advance of the meeting.
Supplementary Investor Information Y13880_Edgar_992_0333_finance18
The document provides supplementary investor information for The Chubb Corporation for the third quarter of 2005, including:
1) Consolidated balance sheet highlights and summaries of invested assets for both corporate and property/casualty segments.
2) Property/casualty underwriting results for the first nine months of 2005, showing a statutory underwriting income of $293.6 million.
3) Details of changes in net unpaid losses and the estimated impact of catastrophes including Hurricane Katrina of $511 million pre-tax cost.
This document provides supplementary financial information for The Chubb Corporation for the quarter ending March 31, 2005. It includes:
- Consolidated balance sheet highlights showing total invested assets of $31.9 billion.
- Summaries of invested assets by corporate and property/casualty segments.
- Investment income after taxes for corporate and property/casualty segments.
- Property/casualty insurance group statutory surplus of $8.25 billion.
- Changes in net unpaid losses for various lines of business.
- Worldwide underwriting results by line of business, showing a total statutory underwriting income of $134.4 million.
The document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation as of June 30, 2005. It includes:
- Consolidated balance sheet highlights showing total invested assets of $32.9 billion including fixed maturities and equity securities.
- Summaries of invested assets for Chubb's Corporate and Property & Casualty segments totaling over $31 billion.
- Investment income after taxes for the second quarter and first half of 2005, with Property & Casualty investment income of $261 million and $513 million respectively.
- Property & Casualty underwriting results for the second quarter and first half of 2005, including a $4.3 billion statutory policyholders' surplus for the P
The document provides supplementary investor information for The Chubb Corporation as of December 31, 2005. It includes a consolidated balance sheet, details on share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets and investment income for both corporate and property & casualty segments. It also provides property & casualty underwriting results for 2005 and 2004, including net premiums written and earned, losses incurred and expenses by line of business.
This document provides supplementary financial information for The Chubb Corporation as of March 31, 2006. It includes consolidated balance sheet highlights, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets for corporate and property & casualty segments, investment income after taxes, statutory policyholders' surplus, changes in net unpaid losses, and underwriting results for personal, commercial, and specialty insurance lines of business. Key metrics such as loss ratios, expense ratios, and combined ratios are also presented.
This document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation for the period ending June 30, 2006. It includes consolidated balance sheet highlights, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets, investment income after taxes, statutory policyholders' surplus, changes in net unpaid losses, and underwriting results by line of business for year-to-date and quarterly periods. Key metrics such as loss ratios, expense ratios, and combined ratios are presented.
The document provides financial information for The Chubb Corporation as of September 30, 2006. It includes highlights of consolidated balance sheet items, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets and investment income for both corporate and property/casualty segments. Details are also given on property/casualty underwriting results for various lines of business on a year-to-date and quarterly basis, including ratios and comparisons to prior periods. Key terms are defined at the end.
This document provides a summary of financial information for The Chubb Corporation as of March 31, 2007. Some key highlights include:
- Total invested assets were $38.7 billion as of March 31, 2007, with fixed maturities making up the majority.
- Statutory policyholders' surplus for Chubb's property and casualty insurance group was estimated at $11.95 billion as of March 31, 2007, with a ratio of statutory net premiums written to surplus of 1.00 to 1.
- For the three months ended March 31, 2007, Chubb's worldwide property and casualty underwriting results showed a total underwriting income of $202 million for personal insurance and $144 million
This document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation for the period ending June 30, 2007. It includes highlights of Chubb's consolidated balance sheet, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets for Corporate and Property & Casualty segments, and investment income after taxes. Key metrics provided are total invested assets of $39.5 billion, shareholders' equity of $13.8 billion, and year-to-date Property & Casualty investment income of $360 million.
This document provides supplementary investor information for The Chubb Corporation, including consolidated balance sheet highlights, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets, investment income after taxes, statutory policyholders' surplus, changes in net unpaid losses, and underwriting results for both the nine months and quarters ended September 30, 2007 and 2006. Key figures include total invested assets of $40.5 billion, shareholders' equity of $14.2 billion, and worldwide property and casualty underwriting income of $543 million for the nine months ended September 30, 2007.
This document provides supplementary financial information for The Chubb Corporation as of December 31, 2007. It includes highlights of consolidated balance sheets, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets, investment income after taxes for corporate and property/casualty divisions, statutory policyholder surplus, changes in unpaid losses, and underwriting results by line of business for 2007 and 2006.
The document provides supplementary financial information for Chubb Corporation as of March 31, 2008. Key highlights include:
- Total invested assets were $40.1 billion, with fixed maturities making up the majority.
- Statutory policyholders' surplus for property and casualty insurance was estimated at $13.3 billion, with a ratio of net premiums written to surplus of 0.9 to 1.
- For the three months ended March 31, 2008, worldwide underwriting resulted in a total profit of $138 million for commercial lines and $164 million for personal lines. Loss and expense ratios remained high but stable.
The document is a report from The Chubb Corporation detailing changes to how losses are presented in their property and casualty underwriting results. Specifically, beginning in Q3 2008, foreign currency fluctuations will impact "net losses paid" and "increase (decrease) in outstanding losses" differently than before. The report provides definitions, ratios, and quarterly underwriting results for Q1 2008 and 2007 to reflect these presentation modifications. Incurred losses remain unchanged.
This document provides supplementary investor information from The Chubb Corporation, including:
- Consolidated balance sheet highlights and share repurchase activity as of June 30, 2008.
- Summaries of invested assets for Corporate and Property & Casualty segments.
- Investment income after taxes for Corporate and Property & Casualty segments for the second quarter and first six months of 2008 versus 2007.
- Property & Casualty statutory policyholders' surplus, change in net unpaid losses, and underwriting results by line of business for the first half of 2008 versus the same period in 2007.
This document from Chubb Corporation reports modifications to the presentation of losses incurred in property and casualty underwriting results for the six months ended June 30, 2008 and 2007. Specifically, it notes that beginning in Q3 2008, foreign currency fluctuations will be reflected differently in "net losses paid" and "increase (decrease) in outstanding losses", though incurred losses remain unchanged. It provides definitions of key terms like underwriting income/loss and combined loss/expense ratio used to evaluate underwriting performance. The document then presents detailed underwriting results by line of business and geographic region.
This document provides supplementary financial information for The Chubb Corporation as of December 31, 2008. It includes highlights of the consolidated balance sheet, share repurchase activity, summaries of invested assets for the Corporate and Property and Casualty segments, and investment income. It also contains information on statutory policyholders' surplus, changes in unpaid losses, and underwriting results for year-to-date and quarterly periods for the Property and Casualty Insurance Group. Key terms are defined at the end.
Dr. Alyce Su Cover Story - China's Investment Leadermsthrill
In World Expo 2010 Shanghai – the most visited Expo in the World History
https://www.britannica.com/event/Expo-Shanghai-2010
China’s official organizer of the Expo, CCPIT (China Council for the Promotion of International Trade https://en.ccpit.org/) has chosen Dr. Alyce Su as the Cover Person with Cover Story, in the Expo’s official magazine distributed throughout the Expo, showcasing China’s New Generation of Leaders to the World.
13 Jun 24 ILC Retirement Income Summit - slides.pptxILC- UK
ILC's Retirement Income Summit was hosted by M&G and supported by Canada Life. The event brought together key policymakers, influencers and experts to help identify policy priorities for the next Government and ensure more of us have access to a decent income in retirement.
Contributors included:
Jo Blanden, Professor in Economics, University of Surrey
Clive Bolton, CEO, Life Insurance M&G Plc
Jim Boyd, CEO, Equity Release Council
Molly Broome, Economist, Resolution Foundation
Nida Broughton, Co-Director of Economic Policy, Behavioural Insights Team
Jonathan Cribb, Associate Director and Head of Retirement, Savings, and Ageing, Institute for Fiscal Studies
Joanna Elson CBE, Chief Executive Officer, Independent Age
Tom Evans, Managing Director of Retirement, Canada Life
Steve Groves, Chair, Key Retirement Group
Tish Hanifan, Founder and Joint Chair of the Society of Later life Advisers
Sue Lewis, ILC Trustee
Siobhan Lough, Senior Consultant, Hymans Robertson
Mick McAteer, Co-Director, The Financial Inclusion Centre
Stuart McDonald MBE, Head of Longevity and Democratic Insights, LCP
Anusha Mittal, Managing Director, Individual Life and Pensions, M&G Life
Shelley Morris, Senior Project Manager, Living Pension, Living Wage Foundation
Sarah O'Grady, Journalist
Will Sherlock, Head of External Relations, M&G Plc
Daniela Silcock, Head of Policy Research, Pensions Policy Institute
David Sinclair, Chief Executive, ILC
Jordi Skilbeck, Senior Policy Advisor, Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association
Rt Hon Sir Stephen Timms, former Chair, Work & Pensions Committee
Nigel Waterson, ILC Trustee
Jackie Wells, Strategy and Policy Consultant, ILC Strategic Advisory Board
A toxic combination of 15 years of low growth, and four decades of high inequality, has left Britain poorer and falling behind its peers. Productivity growth is weak and public investment is low, while wages today are no higher than they were before the financial crisis. Britain needs a new economic strategy to lift itself out of stagnation.
Scotland is in many ways a microcosm of this challenge. It has become a hub for creative industries, is home to several world-class universities and a thriving community of businesses – strengths that need to be harness and leveraged. But it also has high levels of deprivation, with homelessness reaching a record high and nearly half a million people living in very deep poverty last year. Scotland won’t be truly thriving unless it finds ways to ensure that all its inhabitants benefit from growth and investment. This is the central challenge facing policy makers both in Holyrood and Westminster.
What should a new national economic strategy for Scotland include? What would the pursuit of stronger economic growth mean for local, national and UK-wide policy makers? How will economic change affect the jobs we do, the places we live and the businesses we work for? And what are the prospects for cities like Glasgow, and nations like Scotland, in rising to these challenges?
Fabular Frames and the Four Ratio ProblemMajid Iqbal
Digital, interactive art showing the struggle of a society in providing for its present population while also saving planetary resources for future generations. Spread across several frames, the art is actually the rendering of real and speculative data. The stereographic projections change shape in response to prompts and provocations. Visitors interact with the model through speculative statements about how to increase savings across communities, regions, ecosystems and environments. Their fabulations combined with random noise, i.e. factors beyond control, have a dramatic effect on the societal transition. Things get better. Things get worse. The aim is to give visitors a new grasp and feel of the ongoing struggles in democracies around the world.
Stunning art in the small multiples format brings out the spatiotemporal nature of societal transitions, against backdrop issues such as energy, housing, waste, farmland and forest. In each frame we see hopeful and frightful interplays between spending and saving. Problems emerge when one of the two parts of the existential anaglyph rapidly shrinks like Arctic ice, as factors cross thresholds. Ecological wealth and intergenerational equity areFour at stake. Not enough spending could mean economic stress, social unrest and political conflict. Not enough saving and there will be climate breakdown and ‘bankruptcy’. So where does speculative design start and the gambling and betting end? Behind each fabular frame is a four ratio problem. Each ratio reflects the level of sacrifice and self-restraint a society is willing to accept, against promises of prosperity and freedom. Some values seem to stabilise a frame while others cause collapse. Get the ratios right and we can have it all. Get them wrong and things get more desperate.
An accounting information system (AIS) refers to tools and systems designed for the collection and display of accounting information so accountants and executives can make informed decisions.
How to Invest in Cryptocurrency for Beginners: A Complete GuideDaniel
Cryptocurrency is digital money that operates independently of a central authority, utilizing cryptography for security. Unlike traditional currencies issued by governments (fiat currencies), cryptocurrencies are decentralized and typically operate on a technology called blockchain. Each cryptocurrency transaction is recorded on a public ledger, ensuring transparency and security.
Cryptocurrencies can be used for various purposes, including online purchases, investment opportunities, and as a means of transferring value globally without the need for intermediaries like banks.
Madhya Pradesh, the "Heart of India," boasts a rich tapestry of culture and heritage, from ancient dynasties to modern developments. Explore its land records, historical landmarks, and vibrant traditions. From agricultural expanses to urban growth, Madhya Pradesh offers a unique blend of the ancient and modern.
KYC Compliance: A Cornerstone of Global Crypto Regulatory FrameworksAny kyc Account
This presentation explores the pivotal role of KYC compliance in shaping and enforcing global regulations within the dynamic landscape of cryptocurrencies. Dive into the intricate connection between KYC practices and the evolving legal frameworks governing the crypto industry.
Explore the world of investments with an in-depth comparison of the stock market and real estate. Understand their fundamentals, risks, returns, and diversification strategies to make informed financial decisions that align with your goals.