
Frances McMorris
Former editor-in-chiefFrances McMorris is a former editor-in-chief of On Wall Street.

Frances McMorris is a former editor-in-chief of On Wall Street.
Mitt Romney has the momentum and nothing last night happened to change that, said Charles Black, a Romney campaign advisor at the SIFMA annual meeting in New York.
The advisory industry has been fretting about the impending tsunami of retiring advisors in the coming years for some time. As a result, firms are assembling succession programs as a way to ease the transition of client assets from older advisors to the much younger set.
Firms come and firms go, but there has to be a bit of nostalgia for Smith Barney.
It's the end of an era. Morgan Stanley announced its U.S. wealth management business, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, has changed its name to Morgan Stanley Wealth Management.
Firms need to foster real loyalty between themselves and their investor-clients, especially if advisors continue to leave, says Arthur Levitt, the former chairman of the SEC.
The Robinson Reuter Group brings $250 million in assets under management to RBC's La Jolla, Calif., office.
Artnet Analytics launches online indices by individual artist and category to educate advisors with clients who are collectors
It looks as if the BRICs have seen their best days, but what's next?
SIFMAs views are not supportable and would make a mockery of the fiduciary standard, according to The Institute for the Fiduciary Standard in a letter to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
The March survey of fund managers found that 23% of investors expect a stronger global economy during the next 12 months.
Raymond James clears one hurdle in getting early termination of the waiting period in connection with the $930 million purchase of Morgan Keegan
University of Chicago Professor Emeritus Marvin Zonis had harsh words for this years slate of presidential candidates, including the incumbent, as he touched on geo-political and economic hot spots for 2012, a year in which 11 nations representing more than half of the world's GDP by purchasing power parity per capita will be selecting their next leaders.
Our annual recruiters roundtable: dissatisfaction in the ranks and the end of blind loyalty translates into advisors on the move.
Some of the reported 1,600 cuts will come from the wealth management unit, but financial advisors will be spared.
FINRA also orders the firm to make restitution for not providing breakpoints on unit investment trust sales and for unsuitable sales of reverse convertibles to older customers.
Krawcheck calls for more diverse perspectives -- not necessarily based on gender or race -- and talks about the importance of appealing to younger investors put off by the struggling economy and Wall Street scandals.
Wirehouses have lost headcount and asset share even as the average assets under management per advisor in the channel has risen, according to a new report released Friday from Cerulli Associates.
Here are five of the most common scams that advisors and their clients either managed to avoid or fell victim to this year.
Recruiters predict discontent will lead to more advisor defections.
As the parent company announces earnings, the Americas unit sees more net new money and higher FA productivity.