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In 1976, Calvert's co-founders, Wayne Silby and John Guffey, launched the first variable rate fund in the US before introducing the Calvert Social Investment Fund (CSIF) in 1982. [1] [4] The Calvert Social Investment Fund (CSIF) was the first mutual fund to oppose Apartheid, and then one of the first groups to reinvest in free South Africa in ...
Calamos Investments; Calvert Investments; Cambridge Associates; Cambridge Investment Research; Capital Group Companies; Capstone Investment Advisors; Captrust; Cetera Financial Group; Charles Schwab Corporation; Citadel LLC; Clarium Capital; Columbia Threadneedle Investments; Columbus Nova; Commonfund; Conning (company) Cottonwood Technology ...
Wayne Silby (born 1948) is an American social investor and entrepreneur. He is the co-founder of Calvert Investments, one of the first and largest socially responsible mutual funds in the nation, [1] and has been acting as the Founding Chairman until his recent retirement.
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In 1967, American International Group, Inc. (AIG) was incorporated as a unifying umbrella organization for most of C.V. Starr's general and life insurance businesses. [28] In 1968, Starr named Greenberg his successor. The company went public in 1969. [29] Former AIG Headquarters in New York
The Calvert Social Index is a stock market index created by Calvert Investments as a benchmark of large companies that are considered socially responsible or ethical. [1] It currently consists of 680 companies, weighted by market capitalization, selected from approximately 1,000 of the largest publicly traded companies in the United States using Calvert's social criteria. [2]
The Holdings of American International Group include the operating entities and subsidiaries of insurance conglomerate American International Group (AIG) that operates in over 130 countries. [1] The company's business consists of four core areas: General Insurance, Life Insurance & Retirement Services, Financial Services and Asset Management. [2]
On November 30, 2004, the SEC announced “the filing..of charges against American International Group, Inc. (AIG) arising out of AIG’s offer and sale of an earnings management product.” The company “agreed to pay a total of $126 million, consisting of a penalty of $80 million, and disgorgement and prejudgment interest of $46 million.”