Thomas Ruggie, a Florida-based investment adviser, thinks that he has identified a new target for his investment management and planning services: people who win personal-injury-lawsuit settlements, and their lawyers.
<i>InvestmentNews</i> has entered into a partnership with Moss Adams LLP to continue the research and studies conducted and produced by Moss Adams since 1992 on independent financial advisory firms.
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke and his Fed colleagues must begin to address investors' concerns about inflation in more concrete terms than he did in his speech at Morehouse College in Atlanta last week.
A financial adviser to former Major League baseball player Mo Vaughn is claiming that he threatened and intimidated her after she tried to rein in his "insane spending habits."
The Charles Schwab Corp. reported better-than-expected first-quarter earnings last week, but buried in the numbers were signs that the headlong growth of the independent-adviser community may be waning, according to some analysts.
Clearing giant Pershing LLC has rolled out a program to help client firms attract fee-based advisers who do some commission business.
Investor's confidence in the stock and bond markets has been shaken, not just by economic weakness but also by the feeling that professional speculators are using tools not available to ordinary investors to plunder the markets.
When Chris Wanken's dad, a branch manager affiliated with Raymond James Financial Services Inc., fired him last March, it ignited a smoldering family dispute that experts say might have been avoided with better planning.
Financial advisers said that clients increasingly consolidated their assets during the market decline, according to a survey released today by Fidelity Investments.
Individuals who invest for themselves — without the help of a financial adviser — show more awareness and commitment to exchange traded funds than their adviser-directed peers.
Oppenheimer Holdings Inc. is interested in picking up some of the brokers and advisers from the distressed Stanford Group Co., the Houston-based broker-dealer arm of the disgraced companies controlled by financial R. Allen Stanford.
Advisers are agitated by the SEC’s decision to expand its examinations of advisory firms to include contact with clients.
Fidelity Investments of Boston today launched three funds, including the firm’s first convertible-securities fund.
A Massachusetts-based registered rep for a MassMutual subsidiary was charged with wire fraud after allegedly swindling two elderly investors.
The Securities and Exchange Commission has announced that it will begin contacting investors to make sure they have the assets their investment advisers are reporting.
Terms such as “fiduciary duty” and “suitability” contribute to investor confusion, and they should be replaced by a “universal standard of care” for brokers, says SIFMA.
Investment advisory firms should be able to hold custody of client assets so long as advisory functions are separated from custodial functions, according to the Investment Adviser Association.
Advisers need to familiarize themselves social networking websites, as younger individuals are poised to inherit a significant amount of wealth, said Microsoft exec Craig Saint Amour.
Locke Capital Management Inc. and its chief executive, Leila Jenkins, lied repeatedly to customers by inventing clients who supposedly lived in Switzerland and had more than $1 billion in assets, the SEC charged today.
Captrust Financial Advisors of Raleigh, N.C., has lured Mark A. Davis, a 17-year-veteran of the retirement industry, to anchor the firm’s first West Coast office.