Positive earnings growth signals continued momentum in the markets and the economy, the economist said.
Americans seem to want more liquidity and less money tied up in primary homes and retirement accounts, said Hearts & Wallets.
A new book portrays an activist investor who let ego get in the way of good judgment.
The new guidance has some investors scratching their heads.
Clients may be relieved to know their 20 somethings aren't so different after all.
Gold, equities have seen a higher-than-normal correlation this year.
The billionaire investor also criticized Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin for dismissing the threat of inflation.
Sorting through the plethora of indexes creates a breakdown in the active-passive distinction, says one research firm.
The 79-year-old investor is bullish on EM stocks and thinks they will exceed 4.5% real returns.
Quant equity factors like momentum show no impact from turmoil.
The income boom enjoyed by Generation X has turned to “bust” for the millennials, a new report says.
Hearts and Wallets asked investors which financial services firms have the best services and staffs.
But he doesn’t expect volatility to return to the extreme calm that characterized 2017.
He sees 10-year Treasury yields moving above 3 percent later in 2018.
Blaming computers for sudden market downturns is a knee-jerk reaction with no basis in fact, he said.
“There is a lot of cash on the side to buy on the break," the hedge fund manager said.
Everything from equities to bonds are moving in unison to a degree rarely seen during this market cycle, the bank said.
The firm is in talks to buy a 55 percent stake in Thomson Reuters Corp.’s largest unit.
Everywhere you look--stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies--past winners keep thriving.
A Montana money manager who called the crisis sees red flags where most other analysts do not.