Joseph Fortuna, Timothy Prete and Salvatore Tartaglione have left UBS for MSSB in Hartford, Conn.
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC today appointed a new head of international wealth management products and services.
Morgan Stanley Chief Executive Officer James Gorman, who took over from John Mack in January, said he's not content with results for last year, when the company reported its first per-share annual loss.
As you probably have heard by now, British oil giant BP PLC has agreed to endow the $20 billion mea culpa fund ordered by President Obama in his Tuesday night address to the nation.
Macro events such European debt issues, regulatory rhetoric and high unemployment all create opportunities.
Desperate to hang on to the gains in their clients' portfolios over the past few months, financial advisers are selling positions and moving into cash.
Finra-backed candidates who represent large and midsize firms are running unopposed so far in the regulator's upcoming board election, but a battle is brewing for three open small-firm seats.
Shaken by the recession and concerned about risk, brokerage firm clients are buying life insurance.
Insurer looks to branch out with new products aimed at affluent customers, business owners
A series of nasty legal fights involving Jesup & Lamont Inc., Penson and Finra may be coming to a head.
Shares of home health providers sank Wednesday as an investigation into the industry's Medicare reimbursement practices expanded.
Overturning state law, New York's highest court this month ruled that estates and beneficiaries can sue estate-planning attorneys for malpractice.
Complex reverse convertibles mostly sold to individual investors; 'inconceivable'
A champion of the fiduciary standard sought to drive a wedge between brokerage and advisory firms today.
Mark A. Mushkat, a 20 year veteran of the wealth management industry, comes from Harris myCFO, a unit of Harris Private Bank.
A growing number of quantitative equity managers are striving to match their computer models to changing market environments better as they fight to reverse the performance drought they've been in since the start of the financial crisis in mid-2007.
The banned broker's responses to questioning, however, often come across as confused.
Arlen Specter wants to dramatically ratchet up the standard of care required of broker-dealers. Part of that ratcheting up: a possible 25 year jail sentence for B-Ds who willfully violate the tougher standard.
Although it is debatable whether inflation will become a problem for the U.S. economy, wealthy investors aren't taking any chances and are piling into tangible assets.