Practice

  • Risk management has taken on a whole new meaning after the crazy behavior of markets during the past 18 months.

    May 25
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission is considering making significant changes to money market mutual funds because there is still a danger that these funds could be unable to meet redemptions when investors begin to step off the sidelines en masse and move back into equity markets.

    May 25
  • Companies are finding that pension plans are far too expensive to offer, despite the tax breaks, USA Today reports. Since the beginning of the year, at least 20 companies have frozen their pension plans; by comparison, that many companies did so throughout all of 2008.

    May 22
  • John Hancock Financial has named James R. Boyle president, in charge of all of the company’s core businesses, including long-term care insurance, variable annuities, 401(k)s, fixed products and mutual funds. He had been president of U.S. insurance.

    May 22
  • Americans plan to continue cutting back on their spending, a survey by financial consulting firm AlixPartners found. Once the recession is over, they plan to spend only 86% of what they did before the crisis began. And their No. 1 goal is replenishing their 401(k) and other retirement savings.

    May 21
  • A significant number of 401(k) assets held by workers who leave their jobs has been left behind in the old plans, Charles Schwab found in an analysis of the activity of workers since the first quarter of 2008.

    May 21
  • Mary Schapiro, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, bridled against the proposal that the government create a consumer financial protection agency. Evidently, the SEC wants to maintain its regulatory control over mutual funds.

    May 21
  • People investing for retirement in mutual funds should not pay capital gains taxes until those shares are sold, according to Senators Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) and Tim Johnson (D-South Dakota). To keep retirement savings earning more money for a longer period of time, the senators have introduced the GROWTH (Generating Retirement Ownership Through Long-Term Holding) Act, which the Investment Company Institute supports.

    May 21
  • The Obama administration is considering forming a regulatory commission to protect consumers against predatory sales and practices by mutual funds, mortgage lenders and credit card companies.

    May 20
  • The financial downturn has prompted Americans to make some improvements where their finances are concerned, namely to reduce spending and increase savings, but when it comes to revolving debt outside of their mortgages, they are doing little to improve their situations.

    May 20