Super Bowl ad winners: Tide, T-Mobile

This image provided by Procter & Gamble shows a still from the company’s Mr. Clean “Cleaner of Your Dreams” Super Bowl 51 spot. The New England Patriots face the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl 51, on Sunday, Feb. 5, 2017.

Super Bowl ad winners: Tide, T-Mobile

This image provided by Procter & Gamble shows a still from the company’s Mr. Clean “Cleaner of Your Dreams” Super Bowl 51 spot. The New England Patriots face the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl 51, on Sunday, Feb. 5, 2017.

Super Bowl ad winners: Tide, T-Mobile

This image provided by Procter & Gamble shows a still from the company’s Mr. Clean “Cleaner of Your Dreams” Super Bowl 51 spot. The New England Patriots face the Atlanta Falcons in Super Bowl 51, on Sunday, Feb. 5, 2017.

Nikkei Rises as Banks Gain on U.S. Deregulation Hopes

Japan’s Nikkei share average rose on Monday as bank stocks climed following measures ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump to reduce regulation in the financial sector, although a slightly stronger yen kept gains limited. The broader Topix gained 0.4 percent to 1,520.42 and the JPX-Nikkei Index 400 added 0.3 percent to 13,618.16.

Nikkei Rises as Banks Gain on U.S. Deregulation Hopes

Japan’s Nikkei share average rose on Monday as bank stocks climed following measures ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump to reduce regulation in the financial sector, although a slightly stronger yen kept gains limited. The broader Topix gained 0.4 percent to 1,520.42 and the JPX-Nikkei Index 400 added 0.3 percent to 13,618.16.

China Shares Gains Curbed by Central Bank’s Tightening

China stocks rose on Monday morning, with sentiment helped by reported progress in restructuring state-owned enterprises , but the rebound was curbed by the central bank’s surprise move to raise short-term interest rates late last week. Despite the tightening there were capital outflows to the Hong Kong share market, putting the index on track to break a four-day losing streak, with gains led by mainland companies.

article

Many people look forward to retirement in all of its budget-friendly glory. But in reality, retirement may not be the bargain you’d expect it to be.

Next 25 Articles

Travis County Judge Sarah Eckhardt has been rocking headgear with strong anti-Trump symbolism: The Pussy hat. To say it’s politically charged is like saying third-rails are shocking: These hats are pointed symbols in opposition to President Donald Trump, who said in an infamous 2005 video that he grabbed women by their privates.

Regret over building society current account axe

A building society boss has said he “wished it was not the case” that around 100,000 of his customers will have to move their money elsewhere. It was announced at the end of last month that all current accounts with the Norwich and Peterborough building society will be closed by the end of August.

High security

Most people have never heard of a Swiss man called Francisco Fernandez, but tens of millions of us rely on him to look after our money. An unassuming 53-year-old who likes playing the piano in his spare time, he is responsible for the security of $4tn of bank deposits around the world.

What is the Standard Deduction For 2017?

The standard deduction for 2017 is $6,350 for single taxpayers and $12,700 for married taxpayers filing joint returns. However, there’s a chance it could change before next tax season, and no matter where it ends up, you may be better off not claiming it.

Super Bowl Ads aim to unite at a divisive time for the US

The moment that two teams and dozens of advertisers have been counting down to for months has finally arrived: Super Bowl 51 at the NRG Stadium in Houston. As the Atlanta Falcons and New England Patriots square off on the field, advertisers will duke it out for the attention of more than 110 million people expected to tune in on Sunday.

Iran Avoids Taking Trump Bait to Collapse Nuclear Deal, for Now

Since the U.S. imposed new sanctions on Tehran over a ballistic missile test Friday, Iran’s conservative media has railed against the government for being too soft, the military has tested another projectile, and officials have generally thumbed their noses at a White House warning that they were now “on notice.” What hasn’t happened, however, is as important: no official has threatened to abandon the nuclear deal signed in 2015 under the previous U.S. administration of President Barack Obama.

Tiffany CEO Ousted After Less Than Two Years

After less than two years on the job, Tiffany CEO Frederic Cumenal will step down effective immediately, but the jewelry retailer said it still expects to report financial results in line with its previous forecasts. Tiffany announced Sunday that it had engaged an executive search firm to find a new CEO.

Overseas Chinese acquisitions of $75bn cancelled last year

Chinese overseas deals worth almost $75bn were cancelled last year as a regulatory clampdown and restrictions on foreign exchange caused 30 acquisitions with European and US groups to fall through. The figures, which reveal a sevenfold rise in the value of cancelled deals from about $10bn in 2015, highlight a waning appetite for global dealmaking by the world’s second-largest economy.

May Faces Fresh Challenge as Lawmakers Debate Brexit Trigger

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May faces a fresh challenge on Monday to her attempt to formally start Brexit negotiations by the end of March, as lawmakers begin a line-by-line debate over legislation that would allow her to do so. The draft law passed its first hurdle on Wednesday when the lower chamber, the House of Commons, voted it through to the next stage, with just one dissenting lawmaker from May’s Conservative Party — former Chancellor of the Exchequer Ken Clarke.

Super Bowl to Dwarf New Releases at Weekend Box Office

Theater traffic typically plunges on Super Bowl weekend and revenue from the top 10 films could total an “unexciting” $78 million this weekend, according to analysts at MKM Partners. Thriller Split from Comcast’s Universal Pictures unit should take first place at the domestic box office for the third straight weekend with revenue of $14 million, per the firm’s estimates.

Los Angeles marchers protest Trump orders on oil pipelines

Hundreds of marchers are taking to the streets of downtown Los Angeles to demonstrate against President Donald Trump’s executive order fast-tracking the Dakota Access and Keystone XL oil pipelines. Protesters hoisting signs and chanting slogans gathered Sunday near Pershing Square and began marching about a mile for a rally at the Edward Roybal Federal Building.

Deutsche Bank Purchases Ads to Apologize for – Serious Errors’

Deutsche Bank AG bought full-page ads in all major German newspapers over the weekend to apologize for “serious errors” after two years of losses that cost the lender billions of euros. Legal cases that date back many years cost the Frankfurt-based company “reputation and trust” in addition to about 5 billion euros since John Cryan took over as chief executive officer in 2015, the ad said, blaming the “misconduct of a few” employees.