Mutual funds

  • By increasing the number of alternative products and strategies it offers, Mellon Capital Management Corp. has generated inflows in the past three years, despite difficult market conditions.

    September 5
  • PIMCO has named Mohamed El-Erian chief executive officer, a position he currently shares as co-CEO with Bill Thompson, who will be retiring at the end of the year.

    September 5
  • Pioneer Investments has selected Brian E. Stack as manager of the Pioneer Growth Opportunities Fund. A 21-year veteran of the mutual fund industry, Stack has specialized in small- and mid-cap growth.

    September 5
  • The number of affluent households in the United States has decreased, according to initial research from the annual Affluent Market Research Program by TNS, a marketing company based in New York.

    September 5
  • Currency hedge funds reported an 0.11% loss in July, according to the Parker FX Index.

    September 5
  • Pacific Investment Management Co. will add an actively managed bond exchange-traded fund to its current ETF lineup, and perhaps other types of active ETFs, The Wall Street Journal reports.

    September 4
  • Generation X millionaires give nearly twice as much to charity on average compared to older generations, according to a new survey.

    September 4
  • In the week ended Tuesday, investors withdrew $11.34 billion from money market mutual funds, according to data from iMoneyNet.com.

    September 3
  • Japanese investors are increasingly flocking to mutual funds that pay out monthly incomes or dividends, with such funds now accounting for 55.7% of all of the nation’s assets in funds, or $303 billion, Nikkei newswire reports.

    September 2
  • Scotiabank has agreed to pay $15 million to acquire a 33% interest in a new mutual fund company that is being formed under the auspices of Bank of Beijing.

    September 2
  • Millions of retirees who are turning 70-1/2 are forced to take money out of their tax-deferred IRAs or 401(k)s each year, or pay a stiff penalty to the government.

    September 2
  • Goldman Sachs has gained approval to launch mutual funds in India, joining AIG and JPMorgan, Reuters reports.Adam Broder will lead Goldman Sachs Asset Management Company (India) Pvt Ltd, with Prashant Khemka taking the chief investment officer post, according to a statement from Goldman."India is one of the most important countries to our Asian business and we have a long-term strategic commitment to this market," Broder said.According to data from the Association of Mutual Funds in India, the country's 35 member funds industry managed about $125 billion at the end of July.

    September 1
  • China's mutual fund sector posted record paper losses for the first half of the year, totaling $158 billion, or 1.08 trillion yuan, yet management fees more than doubled from a year ago, according to Shanghai Securities News.Equity mutual funds posted a combined unrealized loss of $155 billion, while money market funds showed a paper profit of $190 million.The huge drop comes at the end of a two-year bull run that raised share prices six-fold. The mutual fund sector grew nearly seven-fold to more than $439 billion, or 3 trillion yuan.

    September 1
  • The chairman of Credit Suisse Group's alternative investments business said that his unit plans an international expansion for the recently acquired Asset Management Finance Corp., using joint ventures to enter new regions and sectors.Chairman Brian Finn said that by early next year Credit Suisse needs to put some Asset Management Finance executives internationally in cities like London or Zurich and eventually in Asia, possibly in Singapore or Hong Kong.He discussed the plans in an interview last week, after the Zurich firm bought 80% of the New York investment manager from National Bank Financial of Canada for $384 million of stock.Finn said that he hopes to have some international customers for Asset Management Finance by late next year."We think that there is a big global opportunity," Finn said. "We have developed a lot of joint ventures in Latin America, China, and the Middle East, but as a general matter as we look at investment managers in the U.S., we think the next few deals will be in more-developed markets."

    September 1
  • The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) has widened its ongoing auction rate securities (ARS) probe with a sweep letter aimed primarily at sellers, rather than lead managers, of the illiquid instruments.The six-page letter, sent last week to 40 broker-dealers, contains a laundry list of requests covering the period from June 1, 2007 through June 30, 2008. Firms must produce all documents, electronic or otherwise, indicating any arrangement with other parties, including ARS issuers and auction agents, to sell, remarket or solicit bids for the securities.“It appears that FINRA is interested in doing a thorough investigation, given the depth and breadth of the request,” said Brian Rubin, Washington, D.C.-based partner in law firm Sutherland Asbill & Brennan and former deputy chief counsel of enforcement at FINRA predecessor NASD.State regulators and the Securities and Exchange Commission have thus far pursued charges against firms -- including Citigroup, UBS Financial Services, Merrill Lynch & Co., Goldman Sachs Group and Deutsche Bank -- that have been lead underwriters as well as sellers of the securities.“Now, it appears that FINRA is looking at selling firms,” Rubin said.FINRA spokesperson Herb Perone would not comment on the letter except to say how many firms received it.Allegations against lead managers have focused on internal communications detailing problems with the auction rate securities market that were not disclosed when the products were sold.With the new sweep letter, according to Rubin, FINRA appears to be investigating whether the selling brokers obtained information from the lead managers that they failed to disclose to clients. The self-regulatory organization is also looking at basic sales practices including whether the securities were suitable investments, misrepresentations were made and advertising was fair and balanced.

    September 1
  • Total assets of money market mutual funds dropped by $625 million to $3.573 trillion for the week ending Aug. 27, according to the Investment Company Institute.Assets of retail money market funds fell $4.90 billion to $1.234 trillion, taxable money market fund assets fell $2.75 billion to $928.49 billion, and tax-exempt fund assets fell by $2.16 billion to $305.29 billion.Institutional money market fund assets increased by $4.28 billion to $2.339 trillion, taxable money market fund assets rose by $8.50 billion to $2.135 trillion, and tax-exempt fund assets fell $4.22 billion to $203.90 billion.

    September 1
  • The Pension Protection Act is succeeding at encouraging employers to automatically enroll and annually increase contributions for workers, Vanguard has found in an analysis of the defined contribution plans it administers.

    August 28
  • When it comes to retirement and finances, members of Generation X and Generation Y talk the talk but they don’t walk the walk.

    August 28
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission has opened a 60-day public comment period to see whether the U.S. should adopt international reporting standards.

    August 27
  • When 12b-1 fees were established in 1980 as a way to help mutual funds gain investors, the industry was far smaller than it is today.

    August 27