Mutual funds

  • Gamco has elected founder Mario Gabelli’s daughter, Elisa M. Wilson, to the board. She is a shareholder of Gamco’s privately held parent company, GGCP, and, along with her siblings, owner of the real estate partnership that leases office space to the firm. She is also president and a trustee of the charitable trust, Gabelli Foundation. Gabelli’s brother, John D. Gabelli, is also on the board.

    March 3
  • Allstate has decided to cancel its seven ClearTarget Retirement Funds after only 10 months, saying that it has decided to exit the target-date mutual fund business due to lackluster sales.

    March 3
  • To mitigate against any future financial catastrophes, the Investment Company Institute on Tuesday called for two new regulators that would focus on systemic risk and the capital markets, bridging the functions of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

    March 3
  • Index equity mutual funds saw average losses of 39.1% last year, while actively managed funds lost an average of 40.5%, according to Morningstar.

    March 2
  • The chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Aging has called for more scrutiny of target-date retirement funds after several 2010 target-date funds posted huge losses in 2008.

    March 2
  • Bank of New York Mellon Promotes Kilpatrick to Pres.

    March 2
  • For all the education the asset management industry has on the importance of saving for retirement, it doesn't appear to have gotten through to the younger crowd, many of whom have completely unrealistic expectations for their golden years.

    March 2
  • In this brutal market, mutual funds that have kept a large stash in cash have performed best, according to Morningstar. Plus, these funds are best-positioned to take advantage of the market once it turns around. "Many of the funds that held up the best in this brutal market have one thing in common-cash," said Greg Wolper, a Morningstar analyst.

    March 2
  • Fidelity Investments is expanding its capital markets division by 20%, or 80 positions, in trading, sales, prime brokerage and operations to serve clients trading mutual funds and hedge funds.

    March 2
  • ICI Tells Congress 401(k) Model is Still Strong

    March 2
  • Reports of the death of stocks and equity mutual funds have been greatly exaggerated.

    March 2
  • NEW YORK - The Securities and Exchange Commission has given U.S. companies more time to comment on its proposal to adopt international financial reporting standards (IFRS), but this extension may be creating uncertainty among those who thought the conversion was a done deal.

    March 2
  • Berkshire Hathaway’s profits tumbled 96% in the fourth quarter to $117 million, from $2.9 billion a year earlier.

    March 2
  • There are only so many cuts an asset management firm can make before the very essence of its being, performance, is threatened, MarketWatch reports.

    March 2
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission is reportedly scrutinizing asset management firms’ custodial arrangements to ensure that they are properly protecting customers’ assets.

    March 2
  • Putnam Investments will waste no time reinvigorating its defined contribution business, and its long-struggling equity funds will have to earn their way into the mix, according to Robert Reynolds, its president and chief executive."We're going to run an open platform," he said. "Yes, it would be great if Putnam was part of the choices, but if not, for whatever reason, that's fine."Reynolds, who took over the company in July, started Fidelity Investments' 401(k) business from scratch and turned it into an industry giant. He is now trying to work quickly to create similar magic at Putnam."Competing for Fortune 100 companies may not be a goal right out of the chute, but we definitely want to be out there this year with a competitive product offering," he said. "This is not a five-year game plan; I think we can be a player in a relatively short period of time."Leading the charge will be Edmund Murphy, a Fidelity veteran Reynolds hired early last month as the head of defined contribution. He will report to Putnam's global marketing and products head, Jeffrey Carney, a Fidelity and Bank of America Corp. veteran Reynolds hired in October. "I think the team we've put together thus far is pretty impressive," Reynolds said.Success in defined contributions would give Putnam some badly needed good news. On Feb. 11 it announced plans to cut 260 jobs, or 11% of its work force, as part of a changed distribution strategy. Its assets have dropped more than 60% in the past six years, to $101 billion as Jan. 31. A 2003 market-timing scandal, several years of poor equity mutual fund performance, and last year's market meltdown have left it battered.Marsh & McLennan Cos. Inc. sold Putnam in 2007 to Canada's Great West Lifeco Inc. for $3.9 billion.Reynolds' earliest initiatives at Putnam were aimed at reversing the losses in its equity funds, which he admits were performing "to no one's satisfaction." A restructuring of the equity investment division announced in November put responsibility for each fund in the hands of a specific manager and created a pay-for-performance system.Putnam has also hired dozens of fund managers, analysts, and others on the investment side.It also pruned its fund lineup, and early this year it announced the industry's first suite of target absolute return mutual funds. The funds, which Reynolds said he envisions as a component of Putnam's 401(k) offering, are designed to provide positive returns over time in rising or falling markets.Tom Modestino, a senior analyst with Cerulli Associates Inc. in Boston, said in-house management of a large number of 401(k) assets is increasingly important in the 401(k) business, since asset management, not record keeping, drives profits. "Record keeping in the 401(k) industry is expensive, and it never gets cheaper," he said.A spokesman for Putnam said it will target plans with $1 million to over $500 million in assets. It was a power in the 401(k) market in the 1980s and 1990s, but Mr. Reynolds said after the dot-com bust, it backed away from the administrative side of the business to focus more on distribution of its funds.The sinking stock market does not change the fact that 70 million baby boomers are set to retire, he said, and the number of 401(k) administrators is poised to shrink.Reynolds said Putnam wants to be a major player in asset management and product development, plan administration and education, and service delivery for sponsors and participants. "If you are going be a player in the 401(k) business, you have to have a commitment to all three legs of the stool," he said.

    March 2
  • Cash influxes into municipal bond mutual funds slowed a bit again last week as muni prices continued to cool off.Investors entrusted $470 million to muni funds that report weekly numbers during the week ended Feb. 25, according to AMG Data Services. That represents a dip from $535.9 million the previous week and more than $700 million the two weeks before that.Still, this was the eighth consecutive week of inflows following 15 weeks of outflows at the end of 2008.Fund managers are now enjoying steady cash flow following a period when assets at all muni funds - including those that report monthly - shriveled to $342 billion from $391 billion, reflecting both outflows and market declines.Earlier this year, funds enjoyed their biggest inflows since May. They followed a red-hot rally in munis during which the yield on the triple-A in 10 years, based on the Municipal Market Data scale, compressed from 4.21% on Dec. 15 to as low as 2.84% on Feb. 12.That rally has since stalled, with the yield creeping back up to about 3.1%, according to MMD.

    March 2
  • Reserve Management Co.'s board has set aside $3.5 billion of the remaining assets in its failed Primary Fund to cover costs and expenses for pending lawsuits against the fund.

    February 27
  • Institutional and retail investors continue to seek safety in money market mutual funds, with total assets of money market mutual funds rising by $9.42 billion to $3.888 trillion for the week ending Feb. 25, according to the Investment Company Institute.

    February 27
  • 401(k) plans in which employers match contributions have contribution rates as much as 9 percentage points higher than those that don’t, Fidelity Investments found. And when combined with immediate vesting, contribution rates climb to 11 percentage points higher.

    February 27