-
The Securities and Exchange Commission task force on hedge funds, buyout funds and mutual funds is looking to hire five fund managers, chief operating officers or executives with “direct exposure to trading and operations,” according to a help-wanted ad it placed last month. The SEC has also retained executive search firm Korn/Ferry International.
April 15 -
In line with its own worst-case-scenario forecast, Charles Schwab Corp. reported a significant decline in first-quarter earnings due in part to a 19% decline in trading revenue. The San Francisco-based discount brokerage company announced Thursday that profits declined 45% to $119 million, or 10 cents per share, from $218 million, or 19 cents per share, a year earlier. Revenue declined 12% to $978 million.
April 15 -
Use of target-date funds is up significantly thanks to their status as qualified default investment alternatives under the Pension Protection Act of 2006 and the growth of automatic enrollment in company-sponsored plans, according to a new Vanguard study.
April 15 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday proposed tracking large blocks of trades by mutual funds, hedge funds, private equity firms and other large institutional investors. The SEC defines a large trader as those that trade $20 million or more in securities in a day, or 20 million shares or $200 million during any calendar month.
April 15 -
Fidelity Investments has begun its search to replace former president Rodger Lawson and has interviewed at least three external candidates for the position over the past few months, Bloomberg reports, citing three people familiar with the search.
April 15 -
MFS Investment Management has named Robert Manning, its current CEO and CIO, to succeed Robert Pozen as chairman of the company. Pozen is set to retire at the end of the year, an announcement said today.
April 14 -
As sentiment among wealth managers shifts, more capital has become available and companies right-size, banks, trust companies, wealth managers, and bank brokerages that are in a strong position to expand into a new market and acquire new units, will do so. But it is also the moment when companies without the capital—and stability—will get left behind.
April 14 -
Boosted by its investment banking and wealth management units, JPMorgan Chase & Co. reported stronger than expected first-quarter results. The New York-based company posted first-quarter earnings today of $3.33 billion, or 74 cents a share, a 55% increase from the year-ago period. JPMorgan Chase’s overall revenue rose 5% to $28.17 billion.
April 14 -
Citi Alternative Investment LLC has sold three hedge fund business units—a fund-of-hedge funds, hedge fund seeding and hedge fund advisory businesses with a collective $4.2 billion of assets under management—to Skybridge Capital, a New York-based hedge fund incubator. The price of the deal was not disclosed.
April 14 - Money Management Executive
Apparently, not all wealthy people are opposed to paying higher taxes.
April 13