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A question of money: What's the best way to pay off my credit cards? (Belfast Telegraph) Question: I have three credit cards with the same APR%. I pay £150 a month to each to cover the interest and a small part of the balance. What is the best way to pay off the amount I owe? Related Stories A question of money: Where's my interest? The headache of paying the price for a plastic Christmas Borrowers review loans in mortgage market shake-up A question of money: RIpped-off by credit ... More . . . Guru Picks: Best Ideas 2010 (Forbes) A random walk in the market would have made you money in 2009, but the path is not so easy from here. Let our gurus guide you. More . . . Tiny money fund yields could shrink even further (New Haven Register) Mark Jewell, AP Personal Finance Writer BOSTON — It’s hard to market any investment when its annual yield starts with a zero. More . . . How to get a $450,000 job: no ads required - just a nice word from the minister (Brisbane Times) The latest instance of the government’s erosion of the normal processes of policy-making and public administration is the appointment of Mike Kaiser as a senior executive with NBN Co. More . . . (AFX UK Focus) 2010-02-08 23:30 Malaysia-Market factors to watch Feb 9 (Interactive Investor) KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 9 (Reuters) - Following is a list of events in Malaysia as well as news stories and press reports which may influence financial markets. More . . . What weak IPOs say about bull market (The Cincinnati Enquirer) You know it's a weak IPO market when a hot technology company prefers Bono to the Nasdaq. More . . . Spinoff lets investors buy a stake in N.Y. Knicks, Rangers (USA Today) Investors will get a chance to bet directly on the fortunes of the New York Knicks and Rangers and their home arena, Madison Square Garden, beginning Tuesday. More . . . What It Takes to Win in this Business (Optionetics.com via Yahoo! Finance) As we hit 2010, I look back on what a really weird year 2009 was - a year where in the first quarter everyone was selling anything that wasn't nailed down. Then, on a cold March day, a decidedly bearish day in the markets, a weird thing happened" the market went up. For most of us, me included, I wasn't convinced that the market was going to keep moving higher. Most of the analysts on TV were as ... More . . . The Money Man: Super-economist Joseph Stiglitz on how to fix the recession (Independent) Anger doesn't sit easily on the urbane, vaguely cuddly frame of Joe Stiglitz. His beard and open-necked shirt lend him an unbuttoned air, and he has the veteran teacher's ability to put the intellectually inferior at their ease, which I am grateful for. A career that includes a spell as Chair of the President's Council of Economic Advisers in the Clinton White House, chief economist at the World ... More . . . Art preview: Glasgow Art Fair (The Scotsman) PROFESSIONAL tennis today is played on a glamorous international circuit, with sponsorship and live broadcasting across the globe. Yet the sport was invented in 1874. So what More . . . Advertise on this page
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