<i>Breakfast with Benjamin</i>: Investment manager Joseph Zada could face 20 years in prison after being convicted for bilking ex-Detroit Red Wings star Sergei Fedorov (pictured) out of $43 million.
Recent volatility has been a cold reminder of why stocks are generally considered long-term investments.
<i>Breakfast with Benjamin</i>: The stock market is clearly shaky, but trying to time it is a fool's game.
The stock market roller-coaster ride showed some signs of relative calm Wednesday, but not all market watchers are ready to claim the worst is over.
Sudden volatility could create short-term buying opportunity for investors with a long-term outlook.
<i>Breakfast with Benjamin</i>: CalSTRS, the country's second-largest pension fund, considers moving $20 billion out of traditional investments and into alternatives.
With the stock market's correction no longer a matter of if, some market watchers and financial advisers have taken to preaching a sense of calm as investors hunker down for a heretofore rare bout of volatility, not a bear market.
Amid market volatility, more mutual funds are playing it safe, but should they be sitting on the sidelines?
<i>Breakfast with Benjamin</i>: Nontraditional bond funds that sounded too good to be true are looking like a bust, so far.
Amid market volatility, more mutual funds are playing it safe, but should they be sitting on the sidelines?