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iShares has launched the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Small Cap Index Fund.
August 19 -
More than $40 billion flowed out of all forms of mutual funds in the week that featured the first-ever downgrade of U.S. debt.
August 18 -
Cantor Fitzgerald is in the process of launching an ETF Arbitrage business that will provide customers with two-sided ETF markets, encompassing full-service execution, research and market color.
August 17 -
During the first trading session after Standard & Poor's downgraded its rating of U.S. debt from AAA to AA+, investors got out of stocks and parked their money in ... U.S. Treasury bonds.
August 15 -
Investors took money out of U.S. bond and stock mutual funds because of the increase in economic uncertainty in July, according to research released on Friday by Strategic Insight.
August 12 -
Mutual fund asset growth worldwide is expected to rise by a moderate 10% this year, according to Financial Research Corp. By comparison, the industrys assets rose 16% in 2010.
August 12 -
BNY Mellon to Cut 1,500, as Expenses Rise Faster than RevenuePrinter Friendly Email Reprints Reader Comments Share | August 10, 2011Tom Steinert-ThrelkeldBNY Mellon said Tuesday it planned to cut its work force by 3 percent or 1,500 positions, by year, as it sees expenses growing faster than revenue.Like what you see? Click here to sign up for Securities Technology Monitor's weekly newsletter to get the latest news and analysis that matters to the effective operation of capital markets.The cuts will come by year end, after a review by all businesses of the composition of its global workforce of 48,900, spokesman Kevin Heine said.The announcement of the cuts comes less than a month after the company posted solid earnings growth.The provider of asset servicing, issuer services, clearing services and other investment services reported second quarter net income of $735 million, up from $658 million a year ago and $625 million in the first quarter of 2011."Over recent quarters, BNY Mellon has succeeded in building positive revenue momentum. However, expenses have been growing unsustainably faster," said Robert P. Kelly, BNY Mellon chairman and chief executive officer.In the past year, revenue has grown 19.6 percent, to $3.1 billion in the second quarter of this year. But staff, professional, legal, software and other “noninterest” expenses have risen 21.2 percent (see chart).Jobs are not the only target for expense reductions. The company also expects to rationalize technology picked up in a series of acquisitions in recent years, most notably the $2.3 billion purchase of the Global Investment Servicing Business of PNC Financial Services Group.In the company’s second quarter earnings call last month, Chief Financial Officer Thomas Gibbons said:There is some low-lying fruit. I mean, if you think about it, we've gone through a number of acquisitions over the past 3 or 4 years. So when we go back and reflect on our technology infrastructure, there's quite a bit we can attack there. We've got too many desktop configurations just the nature of our business model, and we're going to go after that. We also have some applications dating back to the Mellon Bank of New York merger, which we think we can sunset too, and we also for the first time are really looking at combining some of our common operations not just within asset servicing, but even across some of our different businesses.BNY Mellon is not planning to offer any voluntary departure packages, Heine said. Instead the company will rely on “natural turnover” and an immediate hiring freeze to hit its job cuts target.The company also expects to reduce its use of temporary workers, consultants and contractors
August 10 -
The Securities and Exchange Commission has upheld an administrative judges ruling that a mutual fund trader must pay more than $200,000 in penalties for accepting gifts from broker-dealers to steer trades their way.
August 10 -
2011 has not been a great year for international equity mutual funds, especially compared to domestic U.S. fund counterparts. But this situation could very well change and investors in the near future, according to analysts at Standard & Poor's Equity Research.
August 4 -
Long-term mutual funds were hit with -$10.381 billion in redemptions the week ended July 27, the Investment Company Institute said. This came on the heels of -$4.58 billion in redemptions the previous week.
August 4 -
American Century has launched the American Century Global Real Estate Fund, managed by Steven Brown. He will be supported by analysts Steven Rodriguez and Vishal Govil.
August 2 -
Private equity firm Warburg Pincus has acquired a majority stake in The Mutual Fund Store as well as a minority stake in Summit Partners, which invested in The Mutual Fund Store in 2006.
August 2 -
Columbia Management has launched the Columbia Flexible Capital Income Fund, which seeks to provide income generation and capital appreciation.
August 1 -
Janus has launched the Janus Asia Equity Fund, which aims to deliver long-term growth by investing in both developed and emerging markets in Asia, ex-Japan.
August 1 -
No one wants the kind of panic that nearly ensued when the Reserve Primary Fund broke the buck on Sept. 15, 2008. In the three days following, there was a near-run on money market funds, with $169 billion in redemptions.
August 1 -
For the past 18 years, it's been almost an article of faith that an exchange-traded fund would be the epitome of a passive investment.
August 1 -
Unique products may bring higher costs that outweigh advantages.
August 1 -
Federated Investors has absorbed $100.6 million in assets from the Tributary International Equity Fund and merged them into the Federated International Leaders Fund, a fund will a similar mandate and that invests in high-quality foreign companies that appear to be undervalued.
July 28 -
Vanguard Group is extending its Admiral low-cost shares to six additional domestic equity index funds, effective September. The new fees will range from 10 basis points to 21 basis points.
July 25 -
As money market funds hold approximately $1.3 trillion in U.S. Treasuries, nearly half of their total $2.7 trillion in assets, investors would probably be spooked in the event of a default by the U.S. government and rush to the exits to redeem their shares. That is the dire warning from Fitch Ratings.
July 19

