Remove 2002 Remove Retirement Remove Valuation
article thumbnail

The Impact of Public Retirement in Texas

Park Place Financial

RETIREMENT PLANNING The Impact of Public Retirement in Texas Schedule a Complimentary Financial Review CLICK HERE TO SCHEDULE. Current and upcoming rulings are changing public retirement for Texans. Learn more about this retirement legislation to determine whether or not you need to make changes to your retirement planning.

article thumbnail

Not Your Grandpa’s Railroad

Fortune Financial

Since 2002, overall carloads on Union Pacific’s network have declined by a bit less than 1% per year, but Union Pacific’s revenues per car have increased 4% per year. railroads have vastly outperformed the broader stock market over the last five-, ten-, and twenty-year periods?

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Strategic Planning in Volatile Markets

Brown Advisory

These planning opportunities are driven primarily by four factors: Materially lower market values for publicly traded securities, and a likely downturn in valuations of real estate and other illiquid assets. Deferral of required retirement plan distributions.

article thumbnail

Strategic Planning in Volatile Markets

Brown Advisory

These planning opportunities are driven primarily by four factors: Materially lower market values for publicly traded securities, and a likely downturn in valuations of real estate and other illiquid assets. Deferral of required retirement plan distributions.

article thumbnail

Transcript: Joe Barratta of Blackstone

The Big Picture

In the short run, there can be distortions in public market valuations as we saw in 2001 and we saw prior to that in 2007, and prior to that in 2000, in ‘99. And so, that didn’t happen until 2002. I mean, you know, this is probably 2002. Valuations go up and you saw it, of course, in the late ‘90s, in the tech sector.

Assets 162
article thumbnail

Finally, a Stock Market Crash!

Mr. Money Mustache

Even Mr. Money Mustache, as a person who retired 17 years ago, is still in this boat for the simple reason that my retirement income from dividends and hobby businesses is still greater than my annual living expenses (which still hover around $20,000 per year). (It’s Everything else is just silly noise.

article thumbnail

Transcript: Michael Rockefeller

The Big Picture

And when they look at a sector, they want to be long, the very best stocks at the best valuations they can, and short the worst stocks at the worst valuations. I got an internship at a investment fund in Baltimore, and this was 2002 at the time. He, he had retired, retired, but he was still active. That was great.