ArchivesMagazine - 01 Nov 2018Should CEOs be forced to buy company shares when they get the top job? BT wants its new CEO to invest 300% of their salary in stock - does that set a new precedent? 01 November 2018|Editor's View|by Dan Coatsworth Share on Facebook Share on Bluesky Share on X (Twitter) Share by Email < Invest with the best: why Brunner is a must-have fund Should you buy Aston Martin now its shares have fallen 26% since IPO? > Issue: 01 Nov 2018 - Page 2 | Contents Next: Should you buy Aston Martin now its shares have fallen 26% since IPO? Previous: Invest with the best: why Brunner is a must-have fund Find out how to deal online from £1.50 in a SIPP, ISA or Dealing account. Share on Facebook Share on Bluesky Share on X (Twitter) Share by Email Dan Coatsworth Issue Contents Editor's View Should CEOs be forced to buy company shares when they get the top job? Exchange-Traded Funds We reveal the cheapest ETFs on the market Feature The skew phenomenon: how a handful of stocks can drive the entire market Emerging markets: toxic or great opportunity? Great Ideas Invest with the best: why Brunner is a must-have fund Keystone Law’s profit soars on high-flying recruits Lok’N Store impresses with full year results Hastings and Yu Group exit our Great Ideas portfolio Worldpay ends referral deal with RBS Investment Trusts Don’t hang around: snap up these investment trusts while they are going cheap News The stocks and sectors affected by the Budget The key takeaways for retirement investors in the Budget Market volatility comes back to haunt investors Rating (and slating) the banks Is Restaurant Group paying too much for Wagamama? The rug has been pulled from under carpets group Victoria Personal Finance How to hold various currencies in your ISA and SIPP Russ Mould Quality of FTSE 100 earnings improves even as the index struggles Under The Bonnet Should you buy Aston Martin now its shares have fallen 26% since IPO?