Investments

  • In a roundtable with The Wall Street Journal four of the most preeminent asset managers discussed their outlook for the economy, and while they expect rough times to continue for some time to come, they do see pockets of opportunity.

    July 7
  • Propelled by yields that have been at 18-year highs for the past nine months, high-yield bond funds rose 23% in the first half of the year.

    July 7
  • Just as the financial crisis is unprecedented, the recovery is also expected to chart new grounds, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports.

    July 7
  • Morningstar has added 10 new categories for its mutual fund classification system, six of them for commodities and four for sectors.The new commodity categories are: agriculture, broad basket, energy, industrial materials, precious metals and miscellaneous. The new sector categories are: consumer discretionary, consumer staples, equity energy and industrials.In addition, Morningstar has added commodities as a broad asset subclass to its six asset classes: U.S. stock, international stock, taxable bond, municipal bond, balanced and alternatives. Funds that correspond to this subclass will be benchmarked against the Morningstar Long-Only Commodity Index.“The growing number of commodity funds and their increased usage prompted us to add these new categories and the broad asset class, so investors can more properly evaluate and compare funds that invest in commodities,” said John Rekenthaler, vice president of research at Morningstar.

    July 6
  • Diminishing employment opportunities notwithstanding, 9.5 million retired Americans are considering returning to work at least part-time, according to a study by Charles Schwab. Also, 32% of currently employed Americans expect to hold onto their jobs and delay retirement.

    July 6
  • The economy will emerge from the recession in the second half of the year, but growth will be a tepid 2% in 2010, a survey of 23 leading economists by BNA found. By comparison, the U.S. economy grew an average of 3.1% a year between 1995 and 2004.

    July 6
  • The majority of financial services firms don’t expect an economic recovery to take place until 2010 or later, with 34% saying they expect a rebound sometime in the first six months of next year and 32% pointing to a future date, a survey of 125 companies by Ernst & Young found.

    July 6
  • Returns on target-date funds continue to disappoint, with the five largest 2010 funds trailing the S&P 500 by 11 percentage points since the market’s March 9 low. They are up an average of 25% since that date, well below the benchmark index’s 36% rise, The Wall Street Journal reports.

    July 6
  • Munder Names FitzGerald As Firm's First President

    July 6
  • Match or No Match, 401(k) Contributions Are Critical

    July 6
  • As the economic slump curbs retirement savings and the government considers imposing curbs on target-date funds, Great-West Retirement Services is trying out what its president is calling "the next generation" of target-date funds.

    July 6
  • It won't be easy in the aftermath of a global recession, but with the right mixture of transparency and expertise, wealth managers will be able to regain their status as trusted advisers.

    July 6
  • In the wake of Bernie Madoff's monumental, $60 billion Ponzi scheme, regulators are proposing to increase accounting safeguards by requiring mandatory surprise audit inspections of every investment adviser with custody of client assets.

    July 6
  • Bill Miller, manager of the Legg Mason Opportunity Trust Fund, is showing that he’s still got game. With the fund returning a stunning 48% in the second quarter, it is the No. 1 performing U.S. stock fund for the period.

    July 2
  • To realize better synergies between people in its personal and workplace investing divisions, Fidelity is reshuffling about 1,000 staff members in four locations.

    July 2
  • Get ready for subdued economic growth in the years ahead, as fear and frugality will dominate the mindset of U.S. consumers for at least a generation, Pimco’s co-CIO Bill Gross says in his July investment outlook, posted on the firm’s website. He projects annual GDP growth rates in the U.S. of 2% a year, down from the historical 3.5%.“Greed will come again. But for now, the trend is the other say, and it promises to persist for a generation at a minimum,” Gross said.While American consumers have been known to have short memories, the fact is, $15 trillion of wealth has been eliminated since early 2007 and the unemployment rate is near 10%, Gross pointed out.He writes: “Our economy’s lights, if not switched off in a rehash of the 1930s Depression, have certainly been dimmed in a 21st century version likely to be labeled the Great Recession. U.S. and many global consumers gorged themselves on Big Macs of all varieties: burgers to be sure, but also McHouses, McHummers, and McFlatscreens, all financed with excessive amounts of McCredit. What a colossal McStake.”

    July 1
  • Registered investment advisors reported a rise in new clients, according to a survey released Monday by TD Ameritrade Institutional, a unit of TD Ameritrade Holding Corp.

    July 1
  • Adviser confidence in the economy and the stock market grew in June, according to Rydex SGI AdvisorBenchmarking.

    July 1
  • After postponing his retirement following the sale of Putnam Investments to Power Financial two years ago, Charles "Ed" Haldeman has stepped down from his positions as chairman of Putnam Investment Management, president of the Putnam Funds and member of Putnam Funds' board of trustees, Putnam said Tuesday.

    June 30