Financial advisers could soon find themselves paying more for AIG's variable annuities.
The extreme stock market volatility kicked off a week ago when the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 500 points underscored the fear spreading across the investment community, leaving financial advisers scrambling for answers and sound advice.
Last week's implosion on Wall Street has given financial advisers and their clients a jolt of unprecedented proportions.
Defending his decision to drive Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. into the arms of Bank of America Corp. in less than 48 hours of negotiations, Merrill chief executive John Thain told the firm's 16,000 brokers last Monday that he had saved their jobs.
The Department of the Treasury announced today that for the next year, it will insure the holdings of any publicly offered eligible money market mutual fund that pays a fee to participate in the program.
The Reserve Management Co. Inc. won’t accept new investors in any of its group of money market funds, the firm said yesterday.
U.S. markets are poised to open sharply higher this morning after top government officials from the administration and Congress announced a several actions last night intended fight the mounting financial crisis, according to published reports.
Say government $50 billion backstop makes funds more attractive — and makes it tougher for banks to attract deposits.
Adding to sweeping government actions announced to alleviate the financial crisis, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson Jr. this morning proposed new measures aimed at buying bad mortgages and distressed debt.
“This is a tough environment to launch a new financial product,” said Neel Kashkari, assistant secretary of the Department of the Treasury, but “never has the market needed this financial product as much as we need it now.”