It's good to own (or work for) a registered investment advisory (RIA) these days. As you may have heard, the CDO debacle is helping RIAs to steal Wall Street firms' clients and their assets. Two-thirds of the 200 RIAs recently surveyed by...
Fidelity Investments was negotiating a contract with the former head of Schwab’s advisor business long before he was allegedly squeezed out due to corporate restructuring at the San Francisco company.
Pop culture, at the moment, is awash with movies, cable-T.V. shows and novels about modern-day vampires—the undead—trying to control (or indulge) their thirst for human blood.
Schwab Institutional had an awesome year in 2008, stealing clients and assets from wirehouse advisors and expanding its lead in the RIA custodian business.
Merrill Lynch confirmed that 6,200 advisors, or about 37 percent of all Merrill financial advisors, signed a retention agreement from new parent company Bank of America by 4 p.m. on Friday. But Merrill says that only about half of the firm's...
The U.S. Government’s investigation of cross-border business by UBS and alleged tax evasion by some of the firm’s US clients has resulted in an indictment of Raoul Weil, Chairman and CEO of UBS Global Wealth Management and Business...
Registered Rep. readers, most of whom are Republicans or Independents, are not too enthusiastic about the country’s new president Barack Obama—even though securities and investment firms ponied up $12.65 million in funds for Obama&...
Bank of America intends to sign the so-called “broker protocol,” an agreement signed by most of the brokerage firms and RIAs stipulating what client information is acceptable for a departing financial advisor to take without getting...
The top 50 financial advisors at Merrill Lynch aren’t happy with the wording of their retention package, and they’ve taken the first step towards getting changes made by collectively hiring a lawyer.
In September and October, Houston-based financial advisor Mike Robertson was getting 60 calls a day from panicked clients. On Long Island, New York, about 5 percent of Mark Snyder's clients hit the phones. They're saying, What's happening? says...