Analysis: Fund managers see value, cyclical stocks running further despite slow U S jobs recovery marketscreener.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from marketscreener.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Balanced Fund Ups Stock Allocation After Defensive Turn to Fixed Income
Barry James, CFA, CIC, is President, CEO and Portfolio Manager with James Investment Research, Inc., and President of the James Advantage Funds. Mr. James received his undergraduate degree from The United States Air Force Academy and his master s degree from Boston University. He joined James Investment Research in its beginning years before a tour of duty as an officer with the United States Air Force. He returned to the company in 1986. Profile Word count: 3,768
TWST: Can you give us an update on the Golden Rainbow Fund? Last year when we spoke, you had more allocation towards fixed income because the economy was hit by the
David Starie on what happened against Joe Calzaghe, a terrifying brain infection and why he rejected Matchroom
David Starie tells Bernard O’Shea about his infamous contest with Joe Calzaghe, the brain infection that terrified him, why he rejected a deal with Matchroom and the night he won a title fight then put out a flaming caravan at 4am
IN January 2000 the so-called “Baddest Man on the Planet” landed in England and stayed for a fortnight. In between kissing babies, posing for photos, lavish shopping sprees, a brush with the Immigration Service and the mass hysteria caused during his visit to Brixton, Mike Tyson took just enough time out of his busy schedule to dispatch British heavyweight champion, Julius Francis, in two rounds at the MEN Arena in Manchester. The chief-support that night was Joe Calzaghe’s fifth defence of his WBO super-middleweight title against Britain’s David Starie. It was Calzaghe’s debut on American TV with Showtime broadcasting the fight in th
By Press Association 2021
Lusamba Katalay (third from left), the husband of Belly Mujinga, joins activists at a vigil at Victoria station
The family of a railway worker who died with Covid-19 after allegedly being spat at have called for police to disclose the suspect’s name.
Belly Mujinga, 47, died on April 5 last year with coronavirus after she was reportedly coughed on and spat at days earlier by a white customer at London’s Victoria station.
British Transport Police (BTP) interviewed a 57-year-old man over the incident but said there was not enough evidence that a crime had taken place.
A lawyer for Mrs Mujinga’s family, Lawrence Davies, said the force had refused to disclose the suspect’s name, preventing them from pursuing a private prosecution and further civil claims.