AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company has developed applications for use on BlackBerry smartphones, which cover retirement income and life insurance topics.
Known as “Super Apps,” the Retirement Income and Life Insurance calculator applications can help individuals in both areas
by estimating income from retirement savings, as well as calculating an appropriate amount
of life insurance coverage. The two applications for BlackBerry
smartphones can also synchronize with BlackBerry address book contacts,
enabling users to directly call or e-mail their financial professionals
from within the application.
According to AXA, the applications also allow BlackBerry smartphone users to:
Automatically receive reminders on important financial
goals or meetings with their AXA Advisors financial professionals
through integration with the BlackBerry Calendar application
Share the applications with friends and family through social channels like Facebook
The new applications join an existing set of
applications AXA Equitable has launched as part of its digital strategy.
Those offerings, launched in 2009 for the iPhone, provide mobile users
with access to interactive calculators addressing college savings,
retirement shortfall, life expectancy, and life insurance.
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Securities Litigation Shifting Away from Financial Industry
Federal class action filing activity increased in 2010, yet the financial services industry is not to blame, according to the 15th annual Securities Litigation Study by
PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).
The total number of filings for 2010 was 174, an increase of
12% from the 155 filings in 2009, according to PwC. This is despite a continuing decline in the number of
financial-crisis-related filings.
Rivaling the financial
industry’s top spot (though not replacing it), was the health industry as the second most commonly
sued industry, followed by the technology industry. The utilities
industry, specifically oil and gas, experienced the highest percentage
increase of filings for any one industry during 2010 due to an increased
number of cases related to mergers and acquisitions (M&A) and the
Gulf oil spill.
Despite 2010’s decline in the number and percentage of
financial-crisis-related cases, overall filings reached the second
highest level in the last five years, the announcement said. Certain
groups of filings with specific common characteristics—such as those
filed against educational companies, M&A-related cases filed across
all industries, and health industry cases—all impacted this year’s
filings. Cases filed against foreign private issuers (FIs), in
particular Chinese FIs, also contributed to the increase.
PwC also found total settlement value in 2010 fell to the
lowest level since 2003 and the average value of settlements decreased
in 2010 compared to 2009 by 11%, from $34.0 million to $30.1 million
respectively. The average accounting-related settlement value of $45.9
million was 319% greater than the average non-accounting-related
settlement value; in 2009 the difference between the two kinds of
settlements was 170%.
Other notable findings in the 2010 study include:
A shift in filings from east coast to west coast - The
single largest number of filings in 2010 was recorded in the Ninth
Circuit, ending the dominance of the east coast, and specifically the
Second Circuit, which since 2005 has seen more filings annually than any
other. In 2010, 30% of filings were in the Ninth Circuit compared to
24% in the Second Circuit.
Accounting-related cases as a percentage of total cases
fell from 37% in 2009 to 35% in 2010, representing the lowest level in
15 years (since the passage of the Private Securities Litigation Reform
Act of 1995 (PSLRA)). The percentage of accounting-related cases
relative to total filings measured each year has been less than 50% for
only 4 of the last 15 years analyzed.
The majority of 2010 federal filings continued to name
directors and officers. Notably, almost all of the categories of
directors and officers named increased from last year.
In 2010, 14% of filings were directed at Fortune 500
companies, compared to 20% of filings in 2009. The percentage of 2010
filings approximated pre-financial-crisis levels.
More information about PwC's Securities Litigation practice and a full copy of the annual study are at http://www.10b5.com.