<i>Breakfast with Benjamin</i> According to Janus' Bill Gross, just because negative interest rates feel good doesn't mean they're a good thing.
EGA is a provider of emerging markets smart-beta funds.
Advisers must regularly monitor investments, even apparently safe mutual funds, to make sure they are not taking on increased risk.
Three firms are telling clients that despite oil's rout, it remains a good long-term play.
Broker-sold fund companies lag since new regulation released.
Plus: Amplify ETF zeroes in on online retail, calling out Gundlach's forecasts, and get ready to start tipping your Uber driver
If Republican frontrunner Donald Trump wins, Mr. Valliere says he'll be rooting for “a really windy inauguration day.”
High valuations, low interest rates spell lower annual returns of 5% or less; timber seen as best bet
The inflow was the most since January 2013, thanks to the market's extreme volatility during 2016's start.
New fund will leverage expertise, diversify product lineup.
Why pulling out of emerging markets borders on foolhardy
Stocks are cheap, but clients should know what they are getting into.
Even though stock funds scored big gains in March, they're still trailing bonds for 2016.
Finra orders the firm to pay about $2.9 million to two investors in Puerto Rico closed-end municipal bond funds. Total claims top $1.1 billion.
Brazil, Russia, India and China were singled out as the investment theme of the new century, but they've fallen like bricks the past five years.
Shares in developing nations were on the brink of a bull market as oil rose and favorable shifts in central-bank policies supported riskier assets.
Competition from index funds could hold the death rate steady going forward.
The unexplained slump follows a similar drop for the Hang Seng Index in May.
<i>Breakfast with Benjamin</i> Franklin Templeton and BlackRock are each making the case for a move into emerging market debt.
Dislocation among sectors, industries and securities, creates the perfect environment for alternative strategies.