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Euroclear appoints Cornock as Senior Business Development Manager

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Euroclear appoints Cornock as Senior Business Development Manager

Stuart Cornock has joined Euroclear’s London office as a senior manager of the Financing and Collateral Business Development department.

In his new role, Cornock will provide sales and relationship management services for collateral-related solutions.

Having worked in London and Singapore, Cornock brings more than 20 years of experience in the securities finance industry, including stock loan trading, sales and relationship management, and regulatory reporting.

Cornock joins Euroclear from Pirum, where he served as director of origination for nearly a year.

Before that, he spent another year as director of market intelligence at S&P Global and more than four years as director at IHS Markit.

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He began his journey in finance as a new issues clerk at Clerstream in 2000, where he later became GSF product manager, followed by GSF sales, and finally sales and relationship manager.

Commenting on his new position at Euroclear, Cornock says: “I’m very much looking forward to working with existing and new clients as we grow the footprint of the suite of financing and collateral products.”

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Why doing everything right no longer protects Canadian families from financial triage

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Why doing everything right no longer protects Canadian families from financial triage
Two young children upset as parents fight at home.

It’s 2026, and most Canadian households aren’t asking how to get ahead — they’re asking how to avoid falling further behind. Fuelled by a quiet frustration and the common refrain behind this anxiety: If I’m doing everything right, why does it still feel like I’m losing ground?

For Stacy Yanchuk Oleksy, CEO of Money Mentors, that sentiment shows up daily in conversations she and her colleagues have with Canadians. These aren’t people who spend wildly; these are Canadians who have already cut spending, already tightened their budget and already done all the tasks required for responsible money management.

As Yanchuk Oleksy pointed out during an interview with Money.ca, the anxiety illustrates a subtle shift in how Canadians are handling the ongoing pressure of higher living costs, where families once talked about budgeting, now the discussion is brinkmanship — deciding what can’t be paid this month, not what should be paid.

These are the households already living lean — and still slipping.

For years, personal finance advice centred on discipline: Track your spending, pay down debt, avoid lifestyle creep.

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But many families have reached a point where discipline alone no longer moves the needle.

“For households already stretched, stability just means the pressure isn’t getting worse — not that it’s getting better,” explains Yanchuk Oleksy.

With interest rates staying elevated longer than expected and everyday costs still stubbornly high, the margin for error has disappeared. Even small disruptions — a car repair, dental bill or temporary loss of overtime — can tip a household from “managing” to “making trade-offs.”

That’s when budgeting turns into triage.

Read more: Canadians spent $183B on dining and clothes in 2024. Prioritize these 4 critical investments instead and watch your net worth skyrocket

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In practice, financial triage means deciding which obligations get paid first — and which get deferred.

“Families cut out anything non-essential — less food in the grocery cart, no dining out, pulling kids from activities, postponing travel — while still relying on credit to cover basics like utilities, school costs, or transportation,” says Yanchuk Oleksy. “Further down the line,” she said, “it looks like parents deciding which credit card or line of credit gets paid — and which one doesn’t.”

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Pinnacle Financial Partners Conference: CEO touts merger culture, 9%-11% loan growth, $250M synergies

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Pinnacle Financial Partners Conference: CEO touts merger culture, 9%-11% loan growth, 0M synergies
Pinnacle Financial Partners (NASDAQ:PNFP) executives emphasized cultural alignment, integration planning, and continued growth expectations following the company’s recently completed merger, during a conference fireside chat featuring President and CEO Kevin Blair and CFO Jamie Gregory. Culture int
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Why Most Millionaires Don’t Feel Wealthy — and What It Really Takes to Feel Financially Secure

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Why Most Millionaires Don’t Feel Wealthy — and What It Really Takes to Feel Financially Secure

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Becoming a millionaire was once considered a clear sign of financial success. Many view it as a milestone that promises comfort, security and even a sense of arrival. But for many Americans today, crossing the seven-figure net-worth mark doesn’t necessarily translate into feeling wealthy.

A growing body of research shows that many millionaires still worry about retirement, healthcare costs and whether their money will last. At the same time, Americans’ definition of wealth has shifted upward as inflation, longer life expectancies and rising housing costs reshape financial expectations.

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