U.S. company directors compensated more than ever, but now risk backlash

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U.S. company directors compensated more than ever, but now risk backlash

(This November 8 story corrects spelling of analytics firm ESGauge, paragraph 10)

Culture change is the cutting edge of mental health benefits at work

When Hartmut Braune comes to work in security communications at SAP, he never knows what emergency will land in his inbox.

Billionaires' wealth falls for first time since 2015

The world's richest people became a little less well off last year, according to a report by UBS and PwC, as geopolitical turmoil and volatile equity markets reduced the wealth of billionaires for the first time since 2015.

Five new life lessons from Charles Schwab

(The writer is a Reuters contributor; the opinions expressed are his own.)

Record highs not enough to lure fund investors to U.S. stocks

U.S. investors last week pulled $4.1 billion from mutual funds and exchange-traded funds that hold domestic stocks, extending a pullback from the U.S. equities market that has now lasted for five of the last six weeks, according to data released Wednesday by the Investment Company Institute.

Beyond windmills, Epoch's Van Valen looks for grid improvements

At a time when U.S. utilities face pressure to rely more on renewable energy, a well-known investor in the space said it is equally important to judge companies by their spending on less glamorous areas like power lines and grid reliability.

Starved for income? Hungry investors hunt dividend ETFs

Rock-bottom interest rates may be great for lots of people - but not for savers.

Wealth gap among retired Americans worsens despite a growing economy

(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)

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