Firm advertised huge returns. It won an award in Monaco. The SEC calls it a fraud

Mediatrix Capital said its clients went five years without a single monthly loss. It said it won an award as top global asset manager for its returns over that time. A group in Monaco declared Mediatrix the Best Family Office Asset Manager.

Investor Netter pushes FSD to restructure or return cash

Investment manager Donald Netter is stepping up his battle with First Trust High Income Long/Short Fund (FSD) by asking the closed-end fund to restructure or give investors their money back because it has been trading at a discount for years.

Guggenheim's Minerd says aggressive Fed moves can delay recession, but not avoid it

Guggenheim Partners global chief investment officer Scott Minerd warned on Tuesday the firm's recession forecast model showed a 58% chance of the economy being in a recession by mid-2020, and a 77% chance of one beginning in the next 24 months.

DoubleLine's Gundlach says U.S. Fed will embark on 'QE lite' 'pretty soon'

Jeffrey Gundlach, chief executive of DoubleLine Capital, said on Tuesday that the repo market squeeze makes it more likely that the Federal Reserve will resume expansion of its balance sheet "pretty soon."

Raymond James to pay $15 million for improperly charging investors: SEC

Financial services firm Raymond James & Associates, a unit of Raymond James Financial Inc , has agreed to pay $15 million to settle charges it improperly charged advisory fees on inactive retail client accounts and charged excess commissions for some brokerage customer investments.

Fund managers have not joined race into cheap, value stocks: BAML survey

Fund managers have not piled into so-called value stocks, which have been shunned during the decade-long technology-led boom, even as shares in beaten-down companies have rallied over the past week, a key investor survey showed on Tuesday.

U.S. value fund managers betting shift to value stocks won't last

The massive U.S. market rotation into value stocks over the last two weeks is finally giving value fund managers a reason to be hopeful after years of underperformance.

Prudential subsidiaries to pay nearly $33 million to settle disclosure charges: SEC

Two Prudential subsidiaries have agreed to pay nearly $33 million to settle charges they failed to disclose conflicts of interest and made misleading disclosures regarding 94 insurance-dedicated mutual funds they advised, the U.S. securities regulator said on Monday.

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