Madoff trustee seeks up to US$2.4 billion for clients
The distribution motion is another major milestone in the worldwide Madoff recovery effort
- By: James Langton
- July 26, 2012 July 26, 2012
- 13:10
The distribution motion is another major milestone in the worldwide Madoff recovery effort
Jim Bull to join HighView management team
New management lineup announced
The decision by U.S. regulators to designate eight firms a “constructive step”
Genuine sales to a trust by its beneficiaries are not subject to the attribution rules
Institutional investor clients, corporate issuers and corporate governance market intermediaries welcome to participate in proxy voting policy survey
Banking industry cautions governments not to get mired down in retirement savings deliberations
Appointment comes from one of the world’s largest pension funds
When selecting new prospects, an individual’s investable income is the top characteristic that successful advisors consider
Investigations may result in fines levied against some banks
Merger objection cases continue to be a major portion of total filings
Partners with Xignite to expand global reach
Derivatives exchange says that it’s exploring the concept of having clearing houses or other depositories hold all customer segregated funds
Report castigates private banks and advisors for their role in tax evasion
Paperwork automation reduces errors and programming costs
Fairfax chairman show confidence
Retirees are less likely to make extra payments, which can lead to higher interest costs over time
Statement aims to clarify market rumours about a potential merger
Money market funds are one important channel through which European crisis could impact U.S. financial markets
Outlook stable
The mandate will be managed by AGF’s global resources team, led by Robert Lyon
Many who currently don’t have a plan believe it’s too early to start thinking about it
TD Canada Trust, ING Direct Canada rank highest in customer satisfaction
Questrade Advantage will appeal to active traders
The Financial Services Consumer Panel says firms put their own interests above those of their customers