The S&P/Harel Sector Indices will provide investors with a
benchmark for measuring sector performance within the Israeli equity
market and will serve as the basis for investment products.
The S&P/Harel Sector Indices are part of a
collaboration agreement entered by the two companies where S&P
launches new sector indices for the Israeli market and Harel issues
investment products which track the new indexes. On February 23, 2011,
Harel will issue two investment products which track the following
indexes:
“With the launch of these Indices, Israeli investors will have
access to S&P Indices full range of indexing capabilities essential
to both measuring asset classes and for serving as the basis for
investment products,” said Alka Banerjee, Vice President at S&P
Indices. “Our full expectation is that these
Indices will be the first of a family of indices serving both Israeli
investors and those from outside of Israel looking to access this
market.”
Each index within the S&P/Harel Sector Indices is made up
of 12, 15, 20 or 25 of the largest eligible publicly traded Israeli
companies listed on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE) within industry
sectors and sub-industries as defined by GICS, the Global Industry
Classification Standard.
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Americans may not be preparing for the unexpected events that can interfere with retirement plans, according to a MetLife Mature
Market Institute study.
The study categorized respondents into ten types of savers:
Snoozers who don’t think about future risks at all. Future risks are not on their radar screens.
Active Resisters who “choose to snooze,” or choose to ignore information about future risks.
Immobilized Worriers who understand future risks, but whose worry prevents them from acting.
Oversleepers who are late in their thinking and planning and may regard their decision or action windows as “come and gone.”
Wood Knockers who think about the unexpected but rely on hope; they choose optimism. Somehow, things will “work out.”
Plan
B-ers who hold on to a contingency plan, or the loose idea of one, as a
protection against trouble ahead. A Plan B may be a “plan” in name
only.
Realists who use the lessons of past experience to think about the future.
Stewers
and Brewers who take a while to make decisions. Stewers may fuss and
fret, while Brewers play with ideas and planning strategies.
Compromisers who think about both today and tomorrow and balance their current needs against future risks.
Preemptive Planners who strive to preempt future risks, or at least their consequences.
“We found that actively preparing for the surprises that
inevitably come our way is the most successful approach to retirement,”
said Sandra Timmermann, director of the MetLife Mature Market Institute. “Knowing you will have guaranteed income sources
available and access to emergency funds is key. To maximize income in
retirement while maintaining liquidity, consider options beyond
low-yielding savings accounts. Some annuity and home equity products
enable you to have access to cash while optimizing returns at the same
time. Ultimately, the capacity to withstand the unexpected is dependent
on the ability of people to imagine, anticipate and prepare for the
circumstances that are often beyond their control.”
On average, MetLife said survey respondents dedicated 15 hours
in the past six months on gathering information or planning for retirement,
and one in five spent no time on planning. Saving stood out as the most
common item among survey respondents as “the one thing” they would do
differently; many would start saving earlier (29%), some would save or
invest more (12%), and others would make better investments (4%).
Only two in ten respondents report that they are very confident
they will have enough money to live comfortably if they or their
spouses/partners live to 85+ years of age, and another six in ten (58%)
are only somewhat confident, the survey found. The remaining 22% are not
confident in their retirement security. More than two-thirds (68%) of
those who did feel at least somewhat confident about a comfortable
standard of living and a long life identified a guaranteed stream of
income as a reason for their confidence, followed by 51% who identified
sufficient savings as contributing to their confidence.
Produced in conjunction with the Scripps Gerontology Center at
Miami University, the survey was based on in-depth personal interviews
with 50 pre- and post-retiree, couples and individuals, and a nationally
representative online survey of 1,007 respondents age 50-70.