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By Melanie Waddell |
May 15, 2012
Allen Stanford and Jon Corzine: two names that have come to occupy the same sullied space as Bernie Madoff.
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By John Sullivan, Advisorone |
May 11, 2012
Jason Zweig is causing controversyâagainâsuggesting the ongoing SRO debate would be solved with robots (seriously).
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By Editorial Staff |
April 24, 2012
Some people ride a wave and some people, like the honorees of the 10th annual IA 25, create a wave.
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By Editorial Staff |
April 24, 2012
Throughout the rest of April and May, weâll be publishing extended versions of each profile, including exclusive interviews, on AdvisorOne.
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By Gil Weinreich, AdvisorOne |
March 27, 2012
As if on cue, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled he would take further action to keep interest rates low the day a new study on âfinancial repressionâ predicted the tactic.
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By Melanie Waddell, AdvisorOne |
March 26, 2012
One day after Allen Stanford was convicted on March 6 of operating a $7 billion Ponzi scheme, the CEO of the Securities Investor Protection Corp. (SIPC) told lawmakers that SIPC is not responsible for reimbursing Stanford investors for their losses.
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By Michael E. Kitces |
March 8, 2012
Notwithstanding some of the successes of the Financial Planning Coalition in pushing forward the fiduciary battle in Washington, requiring all advisors to act in the best interests of their clients is still an uphill fight.
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By Michael S. Fischer |
March 8, 2012
U.S. colleges raised $30.3 billion in 2011, an increase of 8.2% over a year earlier, according to the annual Voluntary Support of Education survey released last week by the Council for Aid to Education.
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By Ronald Delegge, ETFguide.com |
February 24, 2012
The magnificent and multiple failures of financial regulators over the past few years have been rather alarming.
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By Gil Weinreich, AdvisorOne |
February 17, 2012
Three years after President Barack Obama signed the stimulus bill, a jury of eminent economists is retrospectively voting its approval of the controversial stimulus measure. Still, a minority of the surveyed economists remain unimpressed with the spending bill.