Commission wants complaints lodged via e-mail, fax or online — but not by phone; what would McGruff think?
In a battle over Dodd Frank, House Republican want whistle-blowers to go through compliance departments first, then the SEC. Democrats say that's backwards.
Ramped-up role in spelling out tax implications of stock sales might well be 'differentiator' in landing prospects; boon to some, bane to others
$250K limit can easily be bumped up to $2M; CDARS, brokered CDs gaining in popularity
With everything Washington politicians have to worry about this year — gigantic budget deficits, getting re-elected, the disintegration of Arab countries, getting re-elected, the rotten economy and getting re-elected — there's a good chance the fiduciary-standard issue may not be resolved for quite some time.
The bicameral, bipartisan 12-person supercommittee must consider changes both to taxes and entitlements to make fundamental changes in the deficit trajectory. But will members be willing to break with party orthodoxy?
Retail accounts of many banks not money-spinners; Wells Fargo latest to join field
New unit named after maker of bank's trademark stage coach
Typical family office invests more than a quarter of its clients' assets with hedge funds; share could be even larger
Former registered sales assistant accused of misappropriating $750K from 22 clients in Palo Alto office
If Main Street blames Washington for debt rating and market decline, Congress could feel constituents' wrath
While Securities America looks to find a suitor -- and tries to stop reps from bolting -- other B-Ds are on the prowl for the firm's top producers. The big winner so far? LPL.
A Philadelphia registered investment adviser has agreed to return nearly $11 million for misappropriating funds from clients who were told their money would support socially conscious investments, while it really went to pay the adviser's debts and for other purposes, according to federal regulators
I think I found the model for how opponents of the fiduciary standard hope to render the standard meaningless after financial regulatory reform
Foreign-policy guru says U.S. needs to invest in advanced manufacturing to create jobs; cheap overseas labor not going away
The Fed says it will begin swapping cheap short-term debt for cheap long-term debt, all in a bid to boost the flagging economy. Says one economist: 'It's a modest step.' But the Fed's admission of a potential long-term slowdown has caused <a href=http://www.investmentnews.com/article/20110922/FREE/110929977>a drop in stocks</a> around the world.<br> | <b>Extra</b> <a href=http://edit.investmentnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/gallery?Site=CI&Date=20110805&Category=FREE&ArtNo=805009999&Ref=PH>The latest odds on another recession</a>
Fears of second economic downtown driven by fears, not fundamentals; 'bad things have not happened'
S&P's single-notch lowering of the U.S. sovereign debt rating was seen as a big blow to the Treasury market. Instead, worries about default on government debt has investors clamoring for -- yep -- government debt. The result? In an auction this week, taxpayers saved $647M.
Critics are not happy with S&P's historic lowering of the U.S. credit rating. They claim the decision is based more on politics than finances. And an alleged $2 trillion 'basic math error' in calculating the government's deficit has not exactly boosted confidence in the rating agency's decision.