Short Interests: At AmEx, it has been a rocky road

Short Interests: At AmEx, it has been a rocky road
SEP 03, 2001
Having experienced a messy meltdown from its exposure to junk bonds, American Express Co.'s financial planning unit seems to have developed a taste for a more plain-vanilla approach to risk management. Stung by the painful sale and write-downs of junk bonds during the first half of the year, which amounted to more than $1 billion, American Express Financial Advisors in Minneapolis has brought in a risk management specialist. Steve Lobo, the new vice president of investment management risk, comes to American Express from Minneapolis-based U.S. Bancorp, where he served as a senior vice president in the company's treasury department. The financial planning unit is still searching for a chief financial officer following the July departure of Stuart Sedlacek. In addition to Mr. Lobo, the adviser unit has also added a chief marketing officer to help sweeten the image of AmEx's proprietary mutual funds. Claire Huang, who moves over from her job as worldwide head of marketing for the American Express Travelers Cheques, had previously led the battle to help ice cream maker Haagen-Dazs compete with rival Ben & Jerry's. How about a scoop of Junk Bond Crunch?

Weisel word not being kept

Thomas Weisel Partners, the firm that helped form Scudder Weisel Partners in January then folded it in March, is completing another about-face, reports the San Francisco Chronicle. The securities firm boasted that it was hiring employees as its rivals were firing them. It more than doubled in size last year, to 845, from 400. Now it is cutting 70 jobs, mostly in investment banking. In an earlier Chronicle article, Weisel's chief operating officer, Blake Jorgenson, said the down market was a time to "smother clients with attention."

Japanese broker gets in the swing

With the Nikkei Dow bobbing off its 17-year low, Nikko Securities Co. of Tokyo is looking to rainy Seattle for its sunshine. The firm will feature Seattle Mariners' rookie sensation Ichiro Suzuki in its advertisements. The brokerage firm is renaming itself Nikko Cordial Group as of Oct. 1 under a new holding company, and it hopes the Japanese baseball hero projects a fresh image.

NASAA or NASA?

A website simulator that recreates the thrills and perils of online investing may not have the wow-effect of flight simulators, but the experience could keep investors from hitting unexpected turbulence. That's the goal of the North American Securities Administrators Association, which last week launched its revamped Investing Online Resource Center website - investing-online.org - complete with a new investor simulator center. The simulators allow investors to experience trading on margin and placing market and limit orders, as well as an Internet stock-hype scheme. Charles Schwab & Co., Datek Online, SiebertNet, FOLIOfn and Patagon USA served as volunteer content advisers and plan to offer links to the site. Deborah Bortner, president of NASAA, which represents securities regulators from the 50 states and Canada's provinces, says that even investors using a financial adviser should try the site.

Latest News

Goldman leads wave of prediction market bans at financial firms
Goldman leads wave of prediction market bans at financial firms

As Goldman Sachs tightens rules on event contract trading, RIAs and hedge funds are weighing their own policies

Advisor moves: Baird recruits $600M veteran pair to director roles in North Carolina
Advisor moves: Baird recruits $600M veteran pair to director roles in North Carolina

Meanwhile, Wells Fargo lures defectors from UBS and JPMorgan to expand in the East Coast, while another bank aligns itself with RayJay's financial institutions division.

AI may be nudging some older workers into early retirement, study finds
AI may be nudging some older workers into early retirement, study finds

New research suggests AI-exposed workers over 55 are leaving jobs more often than before ChatGPT’s rise.

Wall Street banks promoting AI agents from research aids into digital coworkers
Wall Street banks promoting AI agents from research aids into digital coworkers

Agentic AI is landing in trading, treasury and wealth management roles across major banks, with advisory functions as the next frontier.

People moves: FiNet hires former LPL executive Andrew Harpp, Ellevest names new CIO
People moves: FiNet hires former LPL executive Andrew Harpp, Ellevest names new CIO

Wells Fargo affiliate and women-focused wealth firm both promote leadership as they scale advisor support.

SPONSORED Direct indexing webinar targets tax-loss harvesting amid market swings

Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income