Shareholders cried “foul” against Morgan Stanley’s chairman and CEO for using 62% of the company’s net revenue for employee compensation. (After accepting a Treasury bailout).
The complaint demanded repayment and also that Morgan Stanley reform its pay practices. The lawsuit also wants repayment of incentive payments made in 2006 and 2007 “because they were based on financial results that were later proven to have been worthless”.
The suit was filed by the Security Police and Fire Professionals of America Retirement Fund and Central Laborers’ Pension Fund. No comment on the complaint from Morgan Stanley. (My comment…”grow”the pension funds, but keep the risk element out of it! Hmmm…if only it worked that way for us all!)
Filed under: Financial Services Industry | Comment (0)
An interesting survey by Jefferson National cited that about 50% of 750 fee-based advisors interviewed said they are turning to a “tactical management” strategy, while 68% are feeling pressure to revise their asset management strategy from the traditional “buy-and-hold” strategy. Only 34% said their clients are more confident with the traditional buy-and-hold.
So, how’s it work and why in a volatile market climate?
The feeling is that the markets will continue to show volatility until a solid market recovery is more evident and the tactical strategy is designed to allow rebalancing the percent of assets held in various categories, therefore taking advantage of certain situations in the market as they occur. Read more...
Filed under: Financial Services Industry | Comment (0)
In a meeting with their advisory group on February 2, 2010, TD Bank Financial Group told financial advisors that their role would no longer exist, according to spokesperson Susan Webb as reported to Pamela Black of OnWallStreet on February 3.
However, these “ousted” advisors could apply for a position at TD Ameritrade or TD Bank’s wealth management division for high net worth clients who have over $750,000 in investible assets.
So the question on the street is: “Is this another example of ‘big bank culture’ that doesn’t care about employees or clients who bought full service and were paying for it?” Read more...
Filed under: Wall Street | Comment (0)
Financial advisory professionals now can use social networking to expand their businesses while still being in compliance with the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934.
The new site, http://www.linkedfa.com/ provides free membership to advisors and their clients. The privately owned Coral Springs, FL based allows financial advisors to retrieve records of communications between an advisor and a client, blog posts, comments and instant messages, along with shared documents and other public or private correspondence.
The site offers privacy settings that allow advisors to have one-on-one conversations with clients, which are logged as well. In addition, compliance officers who join the network can monitor client-advisor correspondence by setting keyword alerts. Read more...
Filed under: Financial Services Industry | Comment (1)