Health Evolution Partners Expands Growth Fund Investing

The News Review:

- Health Evolution Partners Expands Growth Fund Investing
- G-Force Investing Focus: The Time for Gold
- Where Greek Mythology Meets Modern Investing
- Baskin paints brighter investing picture
- Finding Investing Opportunities Using Obamanomics
- NewMarket Technology, Inc. Provides Fresh Perspective on Economic …

Health Evolution Partners Expands Growth Fund Investing
MarketWatch 
Brailer also announced that Christopher McFadden, a former managing
director at Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. , has joined Health Evolution
Partners as a managing director of the Growth Fund and will establish
the New York office for Health Evolution Partners. “Our investment team covers the key sectors, stages and geographies of
the health care industry,” said Brailer. “They have lived the challenges
and opportunities faced by growing health care companies and understand
what they need to do to navigate the current environment. I have asked
this team to be relentlessly focused on building the next wave of
leading health care brands. ”

“This team expansion will help position Health Evolution Partners in the
marketplace with a strong and durable firm,” said Leon Shahanian, Senior
Investment Officer for Alternative Investments at CalPERS, Health
Evolution Partners’ largest limited partner. “We are confident that the
experience brought by the team can take advantage of market conditions
to be the strongest and best investor in health care.

G-Force Investing Focus: The Time for Gold
Oxbury Publishing, MD 
The goal was to provide real, usable information for subscribers who want to prepare for the worst. We discussed “Guns, Gold, Gas and Grub” in general terms. Now we get down to specifics. We’re highlighting an investment in the Gold sector of the portfolio that should be considered not only for those dark days that are coming, but now, while opportunity and market realities favor it.
Related from Prmonster: Business Diplomacy Practiced by Public Relations Professionals is …

Where Greek Mythology Meets Modern Investing
Motley Fool 
Master –>

Where Greek Mythology Meets Modern Investing

By Christopher Barker

November 18, 2008

Comment (0). The modern Ulysses — a new dry bulk cargo vessel — appears similarly destined to remain at sea. In fact, following a substantial restructuring to weather.

Baskin paints brighter investing picture
TheChronicleHerald.ca, Canada 
IMG_Provincial_11-19-08_1L9T87D. They’re scared and they don’t know what’s going to happen next. But Baskin, president of Baskin Financial Services Inc. of Toronto, points out that while the markets are scary at the moment, there is in fact a lot less risk than there was in August, although people don’t view it that way. “When the market goes up relentlessly, people don’t see the risk.

Finding Investing Opportunities Using Obamanomics
istockAnalyst.com (press release), OR 
Here’s my take on what Obama means to the global economy:

1. Obama has explicitly stated that deficit spending should not be a concern over the past two years. And (consensus is) that we shouldn’t worry about the deficit next year or even the year after; that short term, the most important thing is that we avoid a deepening recession.

NewMarket Technology, Inc. Provides Fresh Perspective on Economic …
MarketWatch 
Neglected, Underappreciated and Difficult to Invest

While the largest business segment contributing to employment and the
gross domestic product consists of businesses with less than $50
million in annual revenue, little opportunity exists for the general
public to invest in these businesses. Likewise, these small
businesses have little access to equity financing or debt with equity
as collateral. Small businesses seeking access to equity investing
are usually relegated to angel investing, venture capital or public
capital available through listing on an over the counter quotation
system. There are few accepted, let alone regulated standards for
angel investing or venture capital. SEC standards do exist for small
publicly traded firms just as they exist for large publicly traded
firms, but the regulations are problematic to small firms and the
retail investors in small firms. Regulations, particularly since the
advent of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, place an extraordinary regulatory
compliance expense on small businesses in terms of the expense as a
percentage of revenue when compared to a large publicly traded firm. Former Chief Counsel for the SBA Office of Advocacy Thomas M.

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