ADVISORY/Charles Schwab Latin America to Host Educational Seminar On Financial Strategies, Alternatives.Business Editors/Education Writers ADVISORY...for Thursday Thursday: see week. (Oct. 18) --CARACAS, Venezuela--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 18, 2001
WHO: Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., a U.S.-based company and one of the
world's leading financial services firms will host Salomon
Cohen, Senior Bond Trader based in California, U.S. and leader
of Charles Schwab International's fixed income department for
Latin America. Cohen previously worked with Citibank in New
York in bond trading and positioning. He graduated from the
University of California in Berkeley with a master's degree in
business administration and has nearly 10 years experience
overseeing the negotiations of emerging market products.
WHAT: Educational seminar titled: Fixed Income Products and
Strategies. The seminar will provide information on strategies
and tactics to help Venezuelan investors understand how to
maximize their fixed income investments. In addition, attendees
will gain insight on a variety of investment alternatives, the
U.S. equities and bond markets.
WHY: Schwab committed to educating investors worldwide in order to
empower them and assist them in making their own financial
decisions. Under current financial market conditions, the
company believes more than ever on helping investors help
themselves with education, information and knowledge.
WHEN: Today
Thurs., Oct. 18, 2001
6:00 p.m.
WHERE: Hotel Tamanaco
Final Av. Principal de las Mercedes
Caracas, Venezuela
COST: Free of charge
Schwab clients and friends only
Charles Schwab Charles Schwab can refer to:
adj. Associated with or offering complete service: full-service gasoline pumps; full-service banks. investing experience to customers through a multi-dimensional offering of the Internet Internet Publicly accessible computer network connecting many smaller networks from around the world. It grew out of a U.S. Defense Department program called ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network), established in 1969 with connections between computers at the , 434 branch offices, speech recognition and touch-tone The common system for pressing a button and entering a telephone number into a telephone. The first such phones were installed in two Pennsylvania towns in the early 1960s. See DTMF. telephone technologies, multilingual mul·ti·lin·gual adj. 1. Of, including, or expressed in several languages: a multilingual dictionary. 2. and international technologies, and direct access to professionals day or night. Member SIPC/NYSE. |
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