
Lee Conrad
Former senior editorLee Conrad is a former senior editor of Employee Benefit News and Employee Benefit Adviser, and a former editor of Bank Investment Consultant.

Lee Conrad is a former senior editor of Employee Benefit News and Employee Benefit Adviser, and a former editor of Bank Investment Consultant.
Im all for the notion of having options, but if you look at just the ETF universe there are more than 1,000 on offer
The St. Louis brokerage company continues to its slow-but-steady growth with new addition in Connecticut.
This comes shortly after seven other FAs joined MSSB.
Planning for retirement isnt just about hitting the magic number.
Last year saw a 22% increase in M&A worldwide, and another 36% increase is expected this year, according to Thomson Reuters.
The U.S. has the most REITs, but the emerging markets are drawing more interest from investors.
Nearly 875,000 employees increased their 401k contributions in 2010, a 21% increase over 2009s level of 721,000 employees, according to Merrill report.
The trust unit continues to see record growth; promotes two managers
The majority of baby boomers intend to have a more active lifestyle in retirement than their parents, as well as a better standard of living.
This changeover includes 1.9 million clients with a total of $131 billion in assets.
The herd is moving in one direction again, and Im getting offers from experts to talk about the joyous event.
The wirehouse says were in the middle of a multi-year bull cycle for equities.
Chris Brewster joined the firm as non-producing manager of the Columbus, Ohio office, which has 10 financial advisors and 27 associates.
Company takes a major step in the cross-marketing strategy that it has highlighted as a benefit in the Merrill acquisition.
Stock markets around the world are on the rise and investor sentiment is, not surprisingly, riding along.
Four came from UBS, two from independent shop Ingalls & Snyder, one from Chase Investment Services.
Both have been approved by Chinese regulators to form respective joint ventures.
A new survey concludes that nearly half of boomers have no financial plans in place in case they live longer than expected.
Keeping it simple, stupid, isnt as easy as youd expect
Many advisors have remained bullish over the past two years, telling investors to put money to work in this hot market.