Investment funds

  • Fidelity Investments has released New Year’s retirement savings resolutions for people in three different age brackets—those 25-35 who are just getting started; those 36-54 who are in the midst, or should be in the midst, of saving; and those 55 and older, who are heading into retirement.

    December 23
  • Pioneer Investments has hired Bill C. Taylor, a 25-year veteran of the financial services industry, to serve as senior vice president and head of relationship management and strategic alliances in the U.S., reporting to Joseph D. Kringdon, head of U.S. retail distribution and president of Pioneer Funds Distributor.

    December 23
  • Neuberger Berman’s board of directors has selected Tom D. Seip as non-executive chairman and Robert Conti as chief executive officer. The two men succeed Peter E. Sundman, who is resigning.

    December 22
  • M&A

    GLG Partners, a hedge fund, is acquiring the U.K. fund management arm of Societe Generale. Although terms of the deal were not disclosed, the firms revealed that the unit has $8.2 billion of assets under management.

    December 22
  • Wilmington Trust has promoted Adrian Cronje to chief investment strategist. He joined the firm in 2005 from Schroder Investment Management in London, where he was director, deputy head of quantitative equity products.

    December 22
  • UBS has distanced itself from responsibility for clients’ unspecified losses in one of its Luxembourg mutual funds that invested in Bernard Madoff’s funds, the Financial Times reports. The marketing and subscription documents for the $1.4 billion Luxalpha Sicav fund state that it is not UBS that is responsible for fund losses but U.S. broker/dealer Access Management.

    December 22
  • Total assets of money market mutual funds dropped slightly during the week ending Dec. 17, falling $2.96 billion to settle at $3.775 trillion, according to the Investment Company Institute.This marks the first weekly decline in overall assets since late September. During their 11-week run, money fund assets increased by $321.2 billion, or 9.3%.Retail money market mutual fund assets rose by $1.57 billion to $1.284 trillion for the week. Of those, taxable fund assets rose $2.08 billion to $985.75 billion and tax-exempt assets fell $507 million to $297.91 billion.Institutional money market fund assets fell $4.53 billion to $2.491 trillion for the week. Among those funds, taxable assets fell $2.7 billion to $2.306 trillion and tax-exempt assets fell $1.83 billion to $184.7 billion.Money fund assets have increased $630.5 billion year-to-date, or 20%, for what could be their second-best increase ever. The best year was 2007, with a gain of $760 billion in new assets. Institutional assets increased $508.0 billion, or 25.6%, and retail assets have increased $122.5 billion, or 10.5%.The seven-day average yield fell from 0.94% to 0.88%, while the 30-day average yield fell from 1.09% to 1.01%, according to iMoneyNet Inc.'s Money Fund Report.The seven-day compound yield also dropped, falling from 0.95% to 0.89% for the week, and the 30-day compound yield fell from 1.09% to 1.02%.The average maturity of money fund portfolios was 50 days, up from 48.

    December 21
  • This was a tough year to launch any new product, and exchange-traded funds were no exception.While ETFs were anticipated by many to overtake mutual funds due to their ability to trade like stocks, the crippling global economic crisis of 2008 put a halt to that growth for now, forcing dozens of new ETFs to close and hundreds more to delay launching until conditions improve.Approximately 70% of the 730 U.S.-based ETFs opened in the last three years, but that pace has slowed significantly this past fall. Many ETFs based on the healthcare industry are liquidating, such as those of New York ETF firm XShares Advisors, and many exchange-traded products based on commodities like oil have been hammered by extremely volatile price swings.Actively managed ETFs also failed to garner widespread support in 2008.

    December 21
  • In a speech this week at the National Press Club in Washington, Investment Company Institute President Paul Schott Stevens reported that only 3% of 401(k) plan participants stopped contributing to their plans in the first 10 months of 2008, despite a staggering 40% decline in the stock market. The ICI based its figures on an analysis of the records of 22.5 million plan participants.

    December 19
  • Former hedge fund Bayou Management executive Samuel Israel III was ordered on Friday to undergo medical and psychological tests at the Devens Federal Medical Center prison in Massachusetts in the last week of December. U.S. District Judge Kenneth Karas ordered the tests to determine whether Israel is competent to have pled guilty to bail jumping.

    December 19
  • One-quarter of 401(k) participants have money invested in a lifecycle fund, but, on average, only 7% of DC plan assets are invested in such funds, according to a joint report from the Employee Benefit Research Institute and Investment Company Institute.

    December 19
  • Dreyfus has launched the Dreyfus Global Sustainability Fund, linked to the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index. It is the first time a U.S. mutual fund has tracked the index.

    December 19
  • President-elect Barack Obama has named regulatory veteran Mary Schapiro to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission after he takes office next month.

    December 18
  • Legg Mason has hired Peter Sundman as president and chief executive officer of its ClearBridge Advisors subsidiary.

    December 18
  • Fidelity Investments has been taking advantage of new changes to 403(b) regulations to expand its presence in the higher education retirement business, adding more than 50 new plans this year.

    December 18
  • Three hundred and forty four hedge funds liquidated in the third quarter, considerably higher than the previous record of 267 in the fourth quarter of 2006, according to Hedge Fund Research.

    December 18
  • The U.S. could see a 70% decline in the number of mutual fund families over the next five years unless regulations are changed to put them on a more equal footing with hedge funds, according to a new report by the Boston research firm Celent, titled: “The Global Credit Crisis: Implications for North American Wealth Management.”

    December 17
  • In a final year-end push, the Securities and Exchange Commission voted 4-1 Wednesday to require mutual funds and the top 500 largest public companies to begin filing financial reports using eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL).

    December 17
  • Eight Nuveen Investments closed-end funds have called for redemption of $700 million in auction-rate preferred securities at par.

    December 17
  • Harris Associates has promoted Rob Taylor from associate portfolio manager on the Oakmark International Fund to co-portfolio manager, along with David Herro, who is also the firm’s chief investment officer of international equities.

    December 17