Legislation to tax carried-interest compensation at ordinary income tax rates instead of lower capital gains rates was reintroduced today by Rep. Sander Levin, D-Mich.
American Funds will no longer sell Class B and 529-B shares of its mutual funds, effective April 21, the firm said today.
The Department of Labor will begin an "immediate review" of target date funds — one that could lead to new regulations placed on the all-in-one investment strategies — according to a letter sent to a key Senate committee.
A Florida Senate bill that would levy heavy penalties on agents and financial advisers who make fraudulent annuity sales has moved closer to becoming law — though not without a few insurance industry-friendly changes.
Even Bernie Madoff isn't exempt from the real estate slump.
Protective Life Corp.’s quest to acquire a Florida bank holding company abruptly ended yesterday because of the insurer’s inability to participate in the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin today charged Fairfield Greenwich Advisors LLC and Fairfield Greenwich (Bermuda) Ltd. with fraud in connection with the Bernard Madoff investment scandal.
The Treasury Department on Tuesday extended a temporary guarantee of money market mutual fund assets initially put in place during the height of the financial crisis.
MetLife Inc. Chairman and Chief Executive C. Robert Henrikson received compensation of $12.4 million in 2008, down 13 percent from the previous year, according to an Associated Press calculation of figures disclosed in a regulatory filing Tuesday.
Eight out of the 10 best-performing bond funds during the three-month period ended March 30 were municipal bond funds, according Lipper Inc. of New York.
An index that tracks signed contracts to purchase previously occupied homes rose in February from a record low a month earlier as buyers took advantage of deeply discounted prices and low interest rates.
Even though retired clients have been hobbled by tanking investments, opportunities still await those who dare to try alternative investments, according to experts.
Advisers are being pelted with a dizzying array of new insurance products. But as quickly as products develop, so, too, do the challenges, which include evaluating carriers’ financial health and deciding which product might be favorable in a given economic environment.
U.S. home prices sank by the sharpest annual rate on record in January, and the pace continues to accelerate, but there were a handful battered metro areas where price declines slowed, according to data released today.
More employer-sponsored retirement plans may start to offer Treasury and government money market mutual funds to minimize the risk of losses, according to a survey of plan consultants released today by Pacific Investment Management Co. LLC.
It looks as if Barclays’ iShares exchange traded fund business will be sold to a Luxembourg-based global private-equity firm.
A marketing technique called framing is being looked at with suspicion even thought it often produces a positive result — getting people to save for retirement.
Fee-only financial advisers were unhappy to learn that 12(b)-1 fee reform — once a top priority for the Securities and Exchange Commission — is on hold, but others in the investment management industry, specifically those in the brokerage community, welcomed the news.
The president of the Swiss Bankers Association says it's time other countries stopped criticizing the Alpine nation as a haven for tax evaders.
Commercial banks lost $9.2 billion trading derivatives during the fourth quarter as the credit crisis intensified, according to a report released today by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.