How high earners can grab a Roth IRA

chief | Asset Management | Monday, January 5th, 2009

How high earners can grab a Roth IRA
Paul Heck owns EveryHome, A successful real estate brokerage in suburban Philadelphia. The 53-year-old never considered making a Roth IRA part of his retirement plan. While Heck understands the substantial tax advantages of a Roth, he makes too much money to qualify. Recently, however, he got a tip from his financial planner about an upcoming change in the tax law that will allow Heck - and many other business owners - to seize a back-door opportunity to open a Roth.

Financial Tips For 2009
The financial markets are in upheaval and many investors are not sure what to do next. Financial advisor Jill Schlesinger has some tips to navigate these turbulent times.

AeroScout Debuts GPS/Wi-Fi Tracking at U.S. Air Base

chief | Asset Management | Monday, January 5th, 2009

AeroScout Debuts GPS/Wi-Fi Tracking at U.S. Air Base
AeroScout Inc. has unveiled a combination GPS and Wi-Fi asset management system that has been selected by the U.S. Air Force 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG) for its 110 million-square-foot outdoor facility at the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona.

World Business Briefing | Europe: Switzerland: Credit Suisse to Sell Stake
The Swiss bank agreed to sell a stake in its global investors business to Aberdeen Asset Management for 250 million British pounds ($361 million) in stock after losses at the unit.

How high earners can grab a Roth IRA

chief | Asset Management | Sunday, January 4th, 2009

How high earners can grab a Roth IRA
Paul Heck owns EveryHome, A successful real estate brokerage in suburban Philadelphia. The 53-year-old never considered making a Roth IRA part of his retirement plan. While Heck understands the substantial tax advantages of a Roth, he makes too much money to qualify. Recently, however, he got a tip from his financial planner about an upcoming change in the tax law that will allow Heck - and many other business owners - to seize a back-door opportunity to open a Roth.

Father-son market experts diverge on 2009 forecast

chief | Asset Management | Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Father-son market experts diverge on 2009 forecast
Noted market strategist Sam Stovall of Standard & Poor’s is calling for a recovery in stocks in 2009, but his father, veteran money manager Robert Stovall of Wood Asset Management, isn’t so sure.

Offshoring and outsourcing in 2009: What does the future hold?

All things considered, 2008 was a relatively stable year for the IT services industry. Deals got smaller and shorter, but they grew in number. The second tier providers and Indian vendors did well, along with Accenture and IBM Global Services. The outlier was EDS, where weakness led to its acquisition by Hewlett-Packard.

IT outsourcing providers were largely unscathed by the economic downturn throughout much of the year. "It took almost two quarters for the effects of the slowdown to manifest in providers' financial statements," says Eugene Kublanov, CEO of San Ramon, Calif.-based outsourcing advisory NeoIT. By the end of this year, however, CIOs became too distracted by the economic destruction surround them to do any outsourcing deals. "As the markets crumbled and CIOs were confronted with the prospects of their personal employment, naturally, decision-making around strategic cost cutting and efficiency took a back seat," says Kublanov.

[ Avoid business-damaging nightmares; read "Painful lessons from IT outsourcing gone bad" | And if  your IT job is moving overseas, maybe you should too. Find out where the hot jobs are abroad and what it takes to move where those jobs are, in InfoWorld's "offshore yourself" special report. ]

That's all poised to change in 2009. The only problem is, that may be bad news for both IT services providers and their IT leader customers.

Back to the future: More — not better — outsourcing
"Whenever there's a downturn people outsource more, not less," says Gartner analyst Linda Cohen. "Organizations want to take costs out wherever they can. CFOs are pounding on their CIOs to just outsource it, just offshore it."

"The difficult economic conditions will push companies further than before to consider what stays in house and what gets done by others," agrees NeoIT's Kublanov. "Additionally, demands by the business for further cost reduction will need to be addressed in an environment where many companies have already leveraged labor arbitrage to source the low-hanging fruit."

CIOs may sign hasty deals for a short-term returns. In a case of what Cohen calls "convenient amnesia," IT leaders may forget all the lessons they learned rushing into bad outsourcing arrangements and chasing elusive benefits. "Everyone has a gun to their head right now," she says. "But the financial voodoo of outsourcing deals doesn't work. You have to accept the reality that if you hand your mess over to a vendor, you're going to eventually have to pay for that burden they take off your plate. You can pay it now or pay it later, but you're going to have to pay."

Bad deals can lead to degradation in service performance and price increases down the line. Smart buyers will ask for shorter term lengths, but in times of economic pressure rational thinking is hard to come by. "People do bad deals for short-sighted reasons," Cohen says. "We've seen it before and we'll see it again."

For vendors: Pain at the margins
Service providers will be only too happy to sign on any new business in 2009. "They're chasing the albatross of quarter-to-quarter earnings," says Cohen. Outsourcers may do anything for revenue, even if it's outside of their sweet spot. It'll be like 2001 all over again. "It looks like good revenue, but in the later years, the provider starts to see profit problems," says Cohen. Then the customer starts getting his "A" team replaced by a "D" team, prices creep up, everything is a change order."

Providers with cash will be king, giving Indian vendors the upper hand. They may try to buy up second-tier companies in the United States, Europe, and Asia, or buy into deals at a discount, just to get a foothold in the United States. They will even buy up customer assets, something they've been unwilling to do in the past. "They'll do anything for cash," says Cohen. But as with any other contract, "a deal that looks too good to be true will read better than it lives."

But the offshore providers will face the additional pressure on their margins as the dollar continues to depreciate.

Outsourcing innovation: Transformation? What transformation?
Remember all that talk about how an IT services provider could be your partner in innovation? Forget about it.

"The focus will shift away from open-ended efforts," says Stan Lepeak, research director of outsourcing consultancy EquaTerra. "Buyers will not have much appetite for transformation in 2009."

"Innovation or big solution implementations will slow down dramatically," agrees Cohen, "unless you prove I'm going to get back in cost improvements a lot more than I put out and it would have to be a pretty rapid ROI for any transformation."

One bright spot: The sustainability of green
Although outsourced innovation will be set aside in 2009, the greening of IT outsourcing deals will not… if only because sustainability can mean cost savings. "Purely environmental desires will take a back seat to explicit cost savings desires," says Lepeak of EquaTerra. "But green that hits the bottom line will flourish."

The only question is-who will see that benefit on their bottom lines?

"There will be a push by buyers on service providers to lower their cost of operations by employing green techniques and pass that savings on to the buyer," says Cohen. "Service providers are trying to go green for own profitability. Buyers will push for that to become a cost improvement for themselves rather than a profitability and performance for the vendor."

CIO.com is an InfoWorld affiliate.



AeroScout Debuts GPS/Wi-Fi Tracking at U.S. Air Base
AeroScout Inc. has unveiled a combination GPS and Wi-Fi asset management system that has been selected by the U.S. Air Force 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG) for its 110 million-square-foot outdoor facility at the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona.

How high earners can grab a Roth IRA

chief | Asset Management | Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

How high earners can grab a Roth IRA
Paul Heck owns EveryHome, A successful real estate brokerage in suburban Philadelphia. The 53-year-old never considered making a Roth IRA part of his retirement plan. While Heck understands the substantial tax advantages of a Roth, he makes too much money to qualify. Recently, however, he got a tip from his financial planner about an upcoming change in the tax law that will allow Heck - and many other business owners - to seize a back-door opportunity to open a Roth.

European shares move higher in shortened trading session

chief | Asset Management | Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

European shares move higher in shortened trading session

LONDON (MarketWatch) — European shares climbed early Wednesday in the last trading session of 2008, with Aberdeen Asset Management among the standout gainers after it agreed to buy a fund management business from Credit Suisse in exchange for a roughly 25% stake in itself. Shares in the U.K. fund management group rose 11.5%. Among the main indexes, the FTSE 100 rose 0.9% to 4,433.92 and the French CAC 40 rose 0.7% to 3,238.17. Both markets will close early Wednesday, while others, including the German and Swiss markets, will not see any trading.

Market Pulse Stories are Rapid-fire, short news bursts on stocks and markets as they move. Visit MarketWatch.com for more information on this news.

How high earners can grab a Roth IRA

chief | Asset Management | Friday, January 2nd, 2009

How high earners can grab a Roth IRA
Paul Heck owns EveryHome, A successful real estate brokerage in suburban Philadelphia. The 53-year-old never considered making a Roth IRA part of his retirement plan. While Heck understands the substantial tax advantages of a Roth, he makes too much money to qualify. Recently, however, he got a tip from his financial planner about an upcoming change in the tax law that will allow Heck - and many other business owners - to seize a back-door opportunity to open a Roth.

London Markets: U.K. shares close higher to end year as oil majors, Vodafone gain

chief | Asset Management | Friday, January 2nd, 2009

London Markets: U.K. shares close higher to end year as oil majors, Vodafone gain
U.K. shares move higher to end a terrible year for the British market, with Aberdeen Asset Management surging after it agrees a deal to buy a fund management business from Credit Suisse.

AeroScout Debuts GPS/Wi-Fi Tracking at U.S. Air Base
AeroScout Inc. has unveiled a combination GPS and Wi-Fi asset management system that has been selected by the U.S. Air Force 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG) for its 110 million-square-foot outdoor facility at the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona.

European shares move higher in shortened trading session

LONDON (MarketWatch) — European shares climbed early Wednesday in the last trading session of 2008, with Aberdeen Asset Management among the standout gainers after it agreed to buy a fund management business from Credit Suisse in exchange for a roughly 25% stake in itself. Shares in the U.K. fund management group rose 11.5%. Among the main indexes, the FTSE 100 rose 0.9% to 4,433.92 and the French CAC 40 rose 0.7% to 3,238.17. Both markets will close early Wednesday, while others, including the German and Swiss markets, will not see any trading.

Market Pulse Stories are Rapid-fire, short news bursts on stocks and markets as they move. Visit MarketWatch.com for more information on this news.

How high earners can grab a Roth IRA

chief | Asset Management | Thursday, January 1st, 2009

How high earners can grab a Roth IRA
Paul Heck owns EveryHome, A successful real estate brokerage in suburban Philadelphia. The 53-year-old never considered making a Roth IRA part of his retirement plan. While Heck understands the substantial tax advantages of a Roth, he makes too much money to qualify. Recently, however, he got a tip from his financial planner about an upcoming change in the tax law that will allow Heck - and many other business owners - to seize a back-door opportunity to open a Roth.

AeroScout Debuts GPS/Wi-Fi Tracking at U.S. Air Base

chief | Asset Management | Thursday, January 1st, 2009

AeroScout Debuts GPS/Wi-Fi Tracking at U.S. Air Base
AeroScout Inc. has unveiled a combination GPS and Wi-Fi asset management system that has been selected by the U.S. Air Force 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG) for its 110 million-square-foot outdoor facility at the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base in Arizona.

Offshoring and outsourcing in 2009: What does the future hold?

All things considered, 2008 was a relatively stable year for the IT services industry. Deals got smaller and shorter, but they grew in number. The second tier providers and Indian vendors did well, along with Accenture and IBM Global Services. The outlier was EDS, where weakness led to its acquisition by Hewlett-Packard.

IT outsourcing providers were largely unscathed by the economic downturn throughout much of the year. "It took almost two quarters for the effects of the slowdown to manifest in providers' financial statements," says Eugene Kublanov, CEO of San Ramon, Calif.-based outsourcing advisory NeoIT. By the end of this year, however, CIOs became too distracted by the economic destruction surround them to do any outsourcing deals. "As the markets crumbled and CIOs were confronted with the prospects of their personal employment, naturally, decision-making around strategic cost cutting and efficiency took a back seat," says Kublanov.

[ Avoid business-damaging nightmares; read "Painful lessons from IT outsourcing gone bad" | And if  your IT job is moving overseas, maybe you should too. Find out where the hot jobs are abroad and what it takes to move where those jobs are, in InfoWorld's "offshore yourself" special report. ]

That's all poised to change in 2009. The only problem is, that may be bad news for both IT services providers and their IT leader customers.

Back to the future: More — not better — outsourcing
"Whenever there's a downturn people outsource more, not less," says Gartner analyst Linda Cohen. "Organizations want to take costs out wherever they can. CFOs are pounding on their CIOs to just outsource it, just offshore it."

"The difficult economic conditions will push companies further than before to consider what stays in house and what gets done by others," agrees NeoIT's Kublanov. "Additionally, demands by the business for further cost reduction will need to be addressed in an environment where many companies have already leveraged labor arbitrage to source the low-hanging fruit."

CIOs may sign hasty deals for a short-term returns. In a case of what Cohen calls "convenient amnesia," IT leaders may forget all the lessons they learned rushing into bad outsourcing arrangements and chasing elusive benefits. "Everyone has a gun to their head right now," she says. "But the financial voodoo of outsourcing deals doesn't work. You have to accept the reality that if you hand your mess over to a vendor, you're going to eventually have to pay for that burden they take off your plate. You can pay it now or pay it later, but you're going to have to pay."

Bad deals can lead to degradation in service performance and price increases down the line. Smart buyers will ask for shorter term lengths, but in times of economic pressure rational thinking is hard to come by. "People do bad deals for short-sighted reasons," Cohen says. "We've seen it before and we'll see it again."

For vendors: Pain at the margins
Service providers will be only too happy to sign on any new business in 2009. "They're chasing the albatross of quarter-to-quarter earnings," says Cohen. Outsourcers may do anything for revenue, even if it's outside of their sweet spot. It'll be like 2001 all over again. "It looks like good revenue, but in the later years, the provider starts to see profit problems," says Cohen. Then the customer starts getting his "A" team replaced by a "D" team, prices creep up, everything is a change order."

Providers with cash will be king, giving Indian vendors the upper hand. They may try to buy up second-tier companies in the United States, Europe, and Asia, or buy into deals at a discount, just to get a foothold in the United States. They will even buy up customer assets, something they've been unwilling to do in the past. "They'll do anything for cash," says Cohen. But as with any other contract, "a deal that looks too good to be true will read better than it lives."

But the offshore providers will face the additional pressure on their margins as the dollar continues to depreciate.

Outsourcing innovation: Transformation? What transformation?
Remember all that talk about how an IT services provider could be your partner in innovation? Forget about it.

"The focus will shift away from open-ended efforts," says Stan Lepeak, research director of outsourcing consultancy EquaTerra. "Buyers will not have much appetite for transformation in 2009."

"Innovation or big solution implementations will slow down dramatically," agrees Cohen, "unless you prove I'm going to get back in cost improvements a lot more than I put out and it would have to be a pretty rapid ROI for any transformation."

One bright spot: The sustainability of green
Although outsourced innovation will be set aside in 2009, the greening of IT outsourcing deals will not… if only because sustainability can mean cost savings. "Purely environmental desires will take a back seat to explicit cost savings desires," says Lepeak of EquaTerra. "But green that hits the bottom line will flourish."

The only question is-who will see that benefit on their bottom lines?

"There will be a push by buyers on service providers to lower their cost of operations by employing green techniques and pass that savings on to the buyer," says Cohen. "Service providers are trying to go green for own profitability. Buyers will push for that to become a cost improvement for themselves rather than a profitability and performance for the vendor."

CIO.com is an InfoWorld affiliate.



Dune Capital emerges as potential buyer for IndyMac: Journal

MADRID (MarketWatch) — New York private-equity firm Dune Capital Management could be a potential buyer for failed IndyMac Bank, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal on Sunday. Citing people familiar with the situation, the report said a deal could be announced as soon as Monday and the new owner is expected to have a federal thrift charter. The giant thrift had $32 billion in assets when it failed in July. If the deal is completed, the new owners would gain control of a huge branch network on the West coast. The Journal said the deal is expected to be for $14 billion, and could also include a loss-sharing deal in which the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. would backstop losses on loans reaching a certain level, citing a person familiar with the discussion.

Market Pulse Stories are Rapid-fire, short news bursts on stocks and markets as they move. Visit MarketWatch.com for more information on this news.

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