Money Management Executive Latest News

  • Total assets of money market mutual funds rose by $2.33 billion to $3.79 trillion for the week ending May 13, according to the Investment Company Institute.

    May 15
  • 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
  • Investors have begun to embrace developed markets, Reuters reports.

    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
  • Hedge funds rose 4.3% in April, according to HedgeFund.net. And year-to-date, they are up 4.5%, compared with a 2.5% decline in the S&P 500 Total Return Index.In the month, performance gains added $40 billion to hedge funds’ total assets. With redemptions totaling $35.1 billion, total assets under management ended at $1.697 trillion. Outflows certainly have steadied. In January, investors took $166.4 billion with them to the exits. In February, they redeemed $37.5 billion, and in March, $51.7 billion.Since the third quarter of 2008, redemptions have totaled $815.3 billion, and in that period, performance brought down assets by another $425 billion.The strongest hedge fund sector in April was global equity, and the only sector to turn negative was commodities.

    May 14
  • Long-term mutual funds netted $13.51 billion in the week ended May 6, according to the Investment Company Institute, marking the eighth straight week that the funds have taken in money, for a total of $78 billion.Stock funds took in $8.17 billion, up markedly from $465 billion in the previous week, prompting some traders to believe the end of the bear market might be near.U.S. equity funds took in $9.85 billion, while international equity funds lost $1.68 billion.Bond funds netted $3.83 billion, down from the $5.61 billion they took in for the week ended April 29.Separately, money market funds lost $2.17 billion in the week ended May 6, following four straight weeks of outflows.

    May 14
  • Advisers are showing signs of optimism after months of market doldrums, according to a new survey by broker/dealer Securities America of 180 of its top producers.

    May 14
  • 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 13
  • The overwhelming majority of investors continued to fund their 401(k)s in the first quarter, Fidelity reports, citing an analysis of the 11.3 million participants it serves through 17,500 defined contribution plans.

    May 13
  • M&A

    Bank of America is selling a 5.8% stake worth about $7 billion in China Construction Bank to help raise a $34 billion capital gap found by the stress test, the Charlotte Observer reports. This amounts to roughly one-third of its current 17% stake in the Chinese lender.

    May 13