Randy Diamond
Randy Diamond is a reporter at our sister publication Pensions & Investments covering global asset management, investor activism, ESG investing and the two largest pension plans in the US: CalPERS and CalSTRS. His LinkedIn profile.
Randy Diamond is a reporter at our sister publication Pensions & Investments covering global asset management, investor activism, ESG investing and the two largest pension plans in the US: CalPERS and CalSTRS. His LinkedIn profile.
Most major publicly traded money managers saw a boost in their assets under management and their profits in the first quarter, driven by a robust equities market as well as positive inflows
Jeffrey Gundlach hasn't lost his investment magic — or his famous ego — running DoubleLine Capital LP, the Los Angeles money manager he formed after his highly publicized firing from now rival manager TCW Group last December.
BlackRock Inc. is losing its tight grip on the $927 billion U.S. ETF market — potentially costing the company hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue — and the competition is just starting to heat up
CalPERS' investment committee is leaning toward expanding the $220.1 billion system's risk portfolio by increasing its public-equity and infrastructure allocations
Executives at Marsico Capital Management LLC have restructured $2.7 billion in debt as they fight for their company's…
Hiring in the asset management business rebounded in 2010 after two sluggish years, but active-domestic-equity managers are on the outs, according to a recent report by executive recruiting firm Russell Reynolds Associates Inc.
Asset inflows improved for many of the largest publicly traded money managers in the third quarter, but analysts said that institutional investors continued to hold off on new mandates
Jeffrey Gundlach hasn't lost his investment magic — or his famous ego — while running DoubleLine Capital LP, the money manager he formed after his highly publicized firing from TCW Group last December
CEO Marc Stern said 175 of TCW's 700 employees will participate in the equity program
Russell Investments still needs to figure out what it wants to be when it grows up.