Banco Popular de Puerto Rico
Banco Popular de Puerto Rico is a full-service financial services provider with operations in Puerto Rico, the United States and Virgin Islands. Popular, Inc. is the largest banking institution by both assets and deposits in Puerto Rico, and in the United States Popular, Inc.
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Unlike private health insurance, Part D drug plans have no cap on patients’ 5% coinsurance costs once they hit $6,550 in drug spending, which forces patients to rely on financial assistance programs. These arrangements, however, do nothing to reduce drug prices.
January 5 -
Haven, the joint health-care venture between Amazon.com Inc., Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co., plans to shut down at the end of February, a spokeswoman said.
January 4 -
Prices will continue to decline until after vaccines make workers feel safe returning to their offices, increasing demand for space.
January 5 -
The acquisition is one of UnitedHealth’s largest and is another step in expanding the company’s health services business under its Optum division. The companies said the combination would help simplify services around medical care to improve health outcomes and lower costs.
January 6 -
Prolonged unemployment harms physical and mental well-being, traps workers in poverty and increases family stress, according to studies.
January 7 -
The guidance seeks to address several criticisms of the first rounds of PPP funding: largely that small, vulnerable businesses were unable to get assistance because larger business claimed the funds before small firms could get to it.
January 8 -
The gadget, which resembles a pager, will buzz if the wearer gets too close to someone else and doesn’t record any personal data.
January 8 -
The President-elect hopes his latest appointee will help the DOL prioritize protecting workers during the pandemic.
January 8 -
The company announced $100 million through 2025 to support small businesses and community development projects in diverse communities.
January 12 -
Experts see powerful employment gains over the next three years that evade the curse of past recessions. If they’re right, millions of Americans will leap back into the workforce as soon as vaccines against the coronavirus roll out.
January 12











