The asset class offers portfolio diversification and a lot of upside protection but advisers can't forget about the impact of foreign exchange on returns.
Three mutual funds just the start for Pzena Investment Management.
Standouts from Vanguard, Pimco and American Funds top the list. Did your favorite make the cut?
Much to the surprise of some market watchers, investors — and thus, financial markets — Monday looked past the brutal terror attacks in Paris on Friday that left 129 people dead and hundreds injured.
<i>Breakfast with Benjamin</i>: The financial markets are likely to be swept up in the immediate unrest following Friday's terror attacks in Paris.
Taxes levied on foreign stock dividends can be recouped, but it makes most sense for high-net-worth clients with multimillion-dollar positions.
Companies paid out a record $1 trillion last year; about 70% came from non-U.S. companies
DoubleLine's Jeffrey Gundlach plans a new global bond fund just as a potential Fed hike could create new risks and opportunities for managers.
<i>Breakfast with Benjamin</i>: Emerging-markets fund manager who darted out of Chinese stocks at the best possible time is now moving back in.
Citizenship by investment is a growing method that allows high-net-worth clients to shield their assets from the U.S. government.
The new model includes private equity, venture capital, activist investing, gold, timber and collectibles
Over the past few weeks, Credit Suisse's global equity strategist has met with customers in the U.S., Europe, and Asia. The takeaway is that everyone is baffled.
Funds that employ alternative strategies — even those in the same general category — can perform drastically differently.
Carlos Hardenberg selected as new lead manager in effort to bolster performance, which has been subpar.
MSCI plans to add nearly two-dozen foreign-listed companies, including two of China's biggest, to its global indexes.
<i>Breakfast with Benjamin:</i> Just because Janet Yellen and the Fed are going to be raising interest rates soon doesn't mean there won't be investment opportunities.
When China sneezed last quarter, the world caught a cold but smart investors found opportunity.
Benchmark hugging will not benefit most investors, so advisers must look far and wide for opportunity.
Parallels between now and 1987 are thin at best
Allows institutional investors to add an initial increment of China A shares exposure to their emerging markets benchmarks.