Investment funds

  • In a similar way that the dot-com boom could serve as a snapshot for the 1990s, the last decade could easily be defined as a period where many Wall Street insiders daringly quit their jobs in exchange for presumptive hedge fund glory, The Wall Street Journal reports.

    June 17
  • Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi earned a government salary of $212,100 last year, which made her the highest paid official in Congress by $47,000, according to the Associated Press.Not too shabby for civic duty.However, when one also considers the combined incomes of spouses, other investments, and overall assets, things suddenly become financially astronomical.

    June 17
  • The family of deceased Circle T Partners hedge fund manager and frequent CNBC guest Seth Tobias is said to be near a settlement regarding his $25 million estate. Since 44-year-old Tobias’s mysterious death last September, his family and his wife, Filomena Tobias, have been disputing the circumstances of his death and the outcome of his estate.

    June 17
  • In pursuit of new investments, developed countries are turning their focus towards the booming economies of frontier nations, The Wall Street Journal reports. Fast-developing countries throughout Africa, Central and Eastern Europe and the Middle East are averaging annual growth rates five times that of developed nations.

    June 17
  • Approximately 78 million working Americans are currently working jobs that do not provide them with a retirement plan; however, Barack Obama is looking to change this predicament, according to a report by CNNMoney.com.

    June 16
  • As JPMorgan Chase begins to remove the Bear Stearns name from its buildings, the firm is taking the opportunity to enhance its own brand identity, The New York Times writes.

    June 16
  • Julius Baer Americas, a subsidiary of the Swiss wealth manager Julius Baer Holding Ltd., has changed its name to Artio Global Investors Inc.

    June 16
  • NEW YORK-Timothy Geithner, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, called for substantial reforms to the structure of the regulatory system of the U.S.

    June 16
  • While Morningstar certainly has carved out its niche and made a name for itself arming individual investors with mutual fund data and insight, the company plans to increase its focus on financial advisers and institutions, or the "pros" eager to pay for quality research. That's according to an interview with Morningstar CEO Joe Mansueto in last week's issue of BusinessWeek.

    June 16
  • FBI Investigating Suicide of Hedge Fund Criminal Israel

    June 16
  • In a conference call Thursday morning, Boston-based Putnam Investments announced that Robert L. "Bob" Reynolds will succeed Charles E. "Ed" Haldeman to become the firm's president and chief executive officer. Haldeman plans to stay on board and will take on a new role as the chairman of Putnam Investment Management, LLC.

    June 16
  • Peter Suhr Joins CFG As Enterprise EVP

    June 16
  • Fidelity Investments is having one of its weakest first five months in recent history. Only 39% of Fidelity's equity funds are in the company of the top half of their peers, whereas 64% were a year ago, according to Morningstar.

    June 16
  • Friends and family members of New York college-bound students can now make contributions to a student's 529 college savings plan, thanks to a change in New York State law that mirrors similar programs in other states.

    June 16
  • Leading-edge technology has never been a hallmark of the Securities and Exchange Commission. While investment management has gone hand-in-hand with cutting-edge technology for the past quarter century, information technology typically accounted for just 8% of the Commission's annual budget in 2005, according to TowerGroup.

    June 16
  • When News Corp. Chairman and CEO Rupert Murdoch speaks, we in the financial publishing world listen, just as fund managers hang on words from Warren Buffett, Bill Gross or Peter Lynch.

    June 16
  • The passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act dramatically increased the volume of materials corporate executives and boards have to review, and staying on top of this mountain of paperwork can be overwhelming.

    June 16
  • Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tannin are close to becoming the first two criminal indictment casualties of the subprime crisis, The Wall Street Journal reports this morning.

    June 16
  • Japan’s domestic asset management reports are not disclosing the way they vote on various resolutions brought up at annual shareholders meetings, according to the Nikkei Report. That disclosure could significantly improve corporate governance.

    June 13
  • Charles Schwab has announced that the Charles Schwab Trust Company (CSTC) will offer target-date collective trust funds for retirement plans.

    June 13