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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
January 18, 2013
Portfolio-related developments over the last week include the closure of Fidelity’s Small Cap Discovery Fund to new investors and an advisor change by Vanguard on its International Value Fund.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
November 29, 2012
This week in new hires, Frank McCarthy was elected chairman and five new members were added to the board of directors at IPA; the DiCiaccio and LaMothe-Gonzalez Groups joined Snowden Capital Advisors; more.
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By Joyce Hanson, AdvisorOne |
October 4, 2012
To sort out the pros and cons of international investing this election season, AdvisorOne went straight to the source for some of the best commentary from thought leaders in asset management.
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By Joyce Hanson, AdvisorOne |
September 14, 2012
NYSE Euronext agreed to a $5 million penalty for sending market data to proprietary customers' feeds before broadcasting it publicly, becoming the first exchange to pay an SEC fine.
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By Joyce Hanson, AdvisorOne |
August 13, 2012
Despite market buzz that dividend-paying stocks are nearing bubble-like proportions, investor demand keeps driving Global X Funds to create new income-producing ETFs, CEO Bruno del Ama said Monday.
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By Melanie Waddell, AdvisorOne |
August 9, 2012
Quite a bit has happened in those five years: billion-dollar frauds, a flash crash exposing major volatility issues and a bill supporting FINRA as advisors' SRO, to name a few developments.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
July 20, 2012
A report in Britain’s Daily Telegraph on Thursday that the Singapore Exchange was in talks to buy the London Stock Exchange was denied by the former on Friday.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
March 15, 2012
A House bill intended to benefit business startups and stimulate job creation has been so sharply criticized on its way to the Senate that opponents may prevail in strengthening consumer protections they say were trashed.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
March 13, 2012
A bill that started out as seven separate pieces of legislation intended to benefit business startups and stimulate job creation is coming in for criticism as it heads to the Senate, as opponents say that it does away with consumer protection.
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By Marlene Y. Satter, AdvisorOne |
February 1, 2012
Measures proposed by the two companies failed to satisfy the Competition Commission. The European Commission characterized the proposal as leading to a “near-monopoly” that would bring harm to customers.