Practice

  • The Securities and Exchange Commission is holding a public seminar on June 10 to help companies and preparers comply with new financial reporting rules.

    May 18
  • Few investors changed their saving or investing habits in 2008, Hewitt Associates reports, citing data from 2.7 million participants. However, equity fund allocations reached record lows.

    May 18
  • The investment community is hopeful that with a little tweaking, target-date funds could be the ideal solution for getting apathetic investors into an age-appropriate asset allocation.

    May 18
  • With pension plans headed for virtual extinction, the 401(k) will inevitably become the sole qualified retirement savings vehicle in the nation, and as such, the defined contribution model must be vastly improved, speakers at the Investment Company Institute's General Membership Meeting in Washington said.

    May 18
  • Those hoping for a return to the good old days of self-regulated, self-correcting markets need to face reality: Those days are over.

    May 18
  • Half of the parents that OppenheimerFunds recently surveyed don’t believe that college is as affordable as it once was, and 43% have saved less than $5,000 for their children’s college education, and another 13% have saved nothing at all. Only 20% have save $20,000 or more.

    May 18
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has begun sending investors checks from the $267 million fair funds distribution fund that came out of a 2006 settlement with Bear Stearns over late trading and market timing in mutual funds.

    May 18
  • Investors’ general inertia has caused most of them to stick with their 401(k)s. On the one hand, it’s a good thing they aren’t trading in and out of their retirement funds, but their lack of interest is hurting them, Dow Jones reports.

    May 18
  • As the financial crisis continues, employers are beginning to take action with regards to their pension or 401(k) plans, according to the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans.

    May 15
  • Following the ponzi scheme of Bernard Madoff, the Securities and Exchange Commission is considering tougher investment advisor rules. One measure the SEC approved Thursday, by a 5-0 vote, is surprise exams, to ensure that investors’ money is intact at a broker/dealer, custodian or bank. The plan is open for public comment.“We are taking this action in response to major investment scams, such as Madoff and many other potential Ponzi schemes,” said SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro. “A surprise exam would provide another set of eyes on clients’ assets and provide additional protection against theft or misuse.”For those advisors, like Madoff, who hold custody of clients’ assets directly, the SEC would require a written review by a certified public accountant.

    May 14