How do you make sure that your nest egg will provide for you not only in your 70s and 80s, but into your 90s and beyond?
Unmarried couples can now deduct effectively twice as much of their mortgage and home interest on their tax returns.
One-year anniversary shows lots of effort to calm nerves, rebuild investor trust.
Divorce filings drop in April and don't spike again until August — after July, the most popular month for vacations.
Broker-dealers may take cue from Wall Street maneuvers as regulatory pressure builds.
It's up to advisers to make sure their clients' nest eggs last into their 90s and beyond.
Trend toward low-cost passive mutual funds will reduce margins.
The prospect of living unhappily ever after in a retirement that can last 20 or 30 years or more is one reason behind the growing incidence of divorce among spouses age 50 and older.
The firm allegedly failed to provide about 2,700 customers waivers tied to upfront sale charges
If you're a real estate investor who wants to buy low and sell high, this is the list for you.
Preferred Apartment Communities Inc. is selling nontraded preferred shares to help fund its growth, giving brokers a 7% commission.
JBG Cos. to acquire New York REIT Inc., creating an $8.4B real estate company focused on New York and Washington-area properties. <b><i>(More: <a href="http://www.investmentnews.com/article/20160526/FREE/160529941/new-york-reit-shares-plunge-after-analysts-question-jbg-cos">New York REIT shares plunge after analysts question JBG Cos. acquisition</a>)</i></b>
The rise of passive asset management threatens to fundamentally undermine the entire system of capitalism, say analysts at research and brokerage firm Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.
New regulation was catalyst for broker-dealer to impose uniformity, says LPL Financial's Mark Casady.
Passive is leading now, but there is still hope for active management
The DoubleLine Shiller Enhanced CAPE fund had a net inflow of $117.07 million in July, its largest ever.
Plus: Jim Cramer's mad method, prime money funds shrink, and how to have fewer regrets when you retire