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The legendary manager’s Unconstrained Bond Fund ended July down almost $1 billion from its February peak.
August 10 -
State Street and Goldman Sachs are planning a series of funds that would invest in everything from robotics to deep-sea exploration.
August 9 -
The shift in strategy comes as central banks move away from policies that have buttressed markets since the financial crisis.
August 8 -
To get back into investors’ good graces, funds have had to alter traits like their liquidity, fees and even their overall structure.
August 7 -
The pool of money will primarily buy investments from so-called side pockets of illiquid stocks created before 2008.
August 6 -
“Are we reactive to what one competitor does? Absolutely not,” CIO Greg Davis says.
August 3 -
A younger cadre of managers led by new President Jonathan Gray is moving up.
August 3 -
High-yield credit volatility has actually declined since the products first came on the scene.
August 2 -
The flood of new money may be evidence that investor angst is confined to the highest-flying tech segment and not the industry at large.
August 1 -
The fund’s portfolio management team began dumping exposure to the social media giant in light of the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
July 27