Mutual funds

  • SEC May Propose New Money Fund Rules in June, Chairman Says

    May 11
  • Flinn Becomes Director of Client Service at MFC

    May 11
  • New Internal Revenue Service accounting rules aim to reconfigure the way investors report gains and losses when they sell stocks and mutual funds by putting the burden on those who handle the transactions.

    May 11
  • For years, Americans enjoyed the "wealth effect," the sense that their assets were gaining value rapidly enough that they didn't have to save much. This perception of ever-expanding prosperity gave them freedom to spend lavishly and enjoy life. The effect was a function of feeling wealthy as well as being wealthy.

    May 11
  • WASHINGTON - Mutual funds remain a sound investment choice, and will, once again, grow through the perseverance of American ingenuity. Investment firms must stress this to investors to restore their faith.

    May 11
  • Fidelity Investments, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs manage wealth for the largest percentage of U.S. millionaires, according to a survey by Fidelity.

    May 11
  • Investors are regaining their appetite for risk, particularly emerging markets funds, The Wall Street Journal reports.

    May 11
  • WASHINGTON—Rather than looking toward a recovery, Richard Davis, chairman, president and CEO of U.S. Bancorp, is “looking for a new direction.”

    May 11
  • WASHINGTON—At a separate summit on 401(k) reform during last weeks General Membership Meeting of the Investment Company Institute, Putnam Investments CEO Robert L. Reynolds called for sweeping retirement reform, beginning with mandatory automatic enrollment in qualified default options, savings escalation, the inclusion of retirement income options and full advice on asset allocation and retirement planning.

    May 11
  • Asking investors to properly maneuver their 401(k) plans in a market like this is akin to an airline pilot stepping aside and telling passengers to take the controls mid-flight. Workers never asked for so much responsibility in controlling their own retirement future, and most have no idea what to do now that the plane is losing altitude. In fact, most investors seem to be in shock and are doing nothing at all. A persistent problem with the mutual fund industry is the lack of education among its customers about how to manage their own retirement savings. Ignorance was bliss when equities were historically delivering 10% average returns, but the tide has turned. The first wave of Baby Boomers realized they did not have enough savings and decided to bet on risky equities to make up for the shortfall. That gamble backfired when equities in nearly every asset class plummeted last year. Now vastly underfunded as they approach retirement, most Boomers are skeptical they will ever get it back. Financial information is very confusing to the uninitiated. The vocabulary is difficult, the products are complicated, and the professional advice isn't always right. If the fund industry can encourage its customers to become more financially savvy, without stepping on any conflict-of-interest tripwires, its investors will be able to shop for the best products at the lowest cost and keep more assets under management. Younger workers-particularly those in my generation-are getting an early and valuable lesson about market volatility. Buy-and-hold investing is obsolete in an era where one bad year can wipe out 20 years of gains. Younger workers still have plenty of time to more than make up for losses, but will be wary going forward of future bear markets. These investors are plugged in to a myriad of information available instantly at their fingertips. As technology continues to advance, this will lead free-thinking investors who will be able to take responsibility for learning how to navigate their savings. Funds would be wise to become the source and the inspiration for that learning. (c) 2009 Money Management Executive and SourceMedia, Inc. All Rights Reserved. http://www.mmexecutive.com http://www.sourcemedia.com/

    May 9
  • WASHINGTON --Mutual funds remain a sound investment choice, and will, once again, grow through the perseverance of American ingenuity. Investment firms must stress this to investors to restore their faith.

    May 7
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has filed fraud charges against the Reserve Primary Fund and its officers for failing to disclose the fund’s vulnerability to Lehman Brothers, as it filed for bankruptcy, instead falsely assuring investors that it would support the fund’s $1 net asset value.

    May 5
  • Market turmoil has spurred investors’ appetite for advice, and nowhere can this be seen more clearly than in mutual funds sold through brokerages or financial planners, according to Strategic Insight.

    May 5
  • As investors have grown more conservative, fund companies are rethinking their entire product lineups, Dow Jones reports.

    May 5
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission is considering better disclosures for target-date funds, particularly their glide paths and asset allocations, SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro told the Mutual Fund Directors Forum.

    May 5
  • Legg Mason lost $325.1 million in the fiscal fourth quarter ended March 31, or $2.29 per diluted share, compared to a loss of $255.5 million, or $181per diluted share, in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2008.

    May 5
  • Despite their growing popularity in recent years, target-date funds are grossly misunderstood, according to a survey by Envestnet Asset Management.

    May 5
  • Investors who have been laid off or who have switched jobs may be in for a rude awakening when it comes to their 401(k). Not only has its value declined steeply, but the investment advisor may not honor redemptions in funds whose assets are tied up in any type of risky, illiquid investment, The Wall Street Journal reports.

    May 5
  • Fidelity Investments has added the IQ Alpha Hedge Strategy Fund to its mutual fund platform, making it available to registered investment advisors and retail investors.

    May 5
  • Growth funds are beating value funds handily so far this year, leading some fund managers to believe the market may be back on track, The Wall Street Journal reports.

    May 5