Most Financial Advisers Don't Understand Alternative Investments According To John Hancock Survey

January 30, 2012 by Page Perry, LLC

Given the array of exotic alternative investments being sold to the public, it’s logical that many investors often don’t understand what they are buying. What is even scarier is that it is likely their professional investment adviser doesn’t understand the alternative investment either. Investment advisers – 75 percent of them – admit they do not understand alternative investments. Notwithstanding their puzzlement, 50 percent of advisers said they intend to increase their use of them in their clients’ accounts this year. They could use some help, however, because of alternative investments are so confusing. (“Alternatives spur anxiety,” InvestmentNews).


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MAT/ASTA Cases Reveal the Seamy Side of Wall Street

January 17, 2012 by Page Perry, LLC

Ordinarily, the evidence presented in a FINRA arbitration is kept “confidential” and secret from the public. That’s the way the securities industry likes it, because it really does not want the public to see the evidence against it. But in its zeal to try to overturn the largest amount ever awarded to individual investors in a FINRA arbitration, Citigroup inadvertently allowed New York Times columnist Gretchen Morgenson to have a look at the evidence that was presented to the arbitrators in that case. What she found is the subject of her recent article entitled “Secrets of a Sales Machine.”

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Are Most Hedge Fund Investors Chasing 'Fools Gold?'

January 3, 2012 by Page Perry, LLC

One former Wall Street hedge fund executive has just published a book in which he claims that investors would have done twice as well as hedge fund investors by investing in U.S. Treasuries over the past decade. Twice as well. Simon Lack, whose book is titled “Hedge Fund Mirage,” is a former hedge fund executive at JPMorgan Chase & Co. He now runs SL Advisors in Westfield, N.J.

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Index Funds Can Carry Considerable Risk

December 30, 2011 by Page Perry, LLC

Is owning index funds a good idea? It depends on the index, according to personal finance expert John Waggoner (“Funds following odd index? Just say no”). Broad based index funds are a good idea, but new exotic niche funds are not.

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High Correlations Among Asset Classes Means There's No Place To Hide

November 14, 2011 by Page Perry, LLC

When world markets move significantly in apparent response to major macroeconomic news, even supposedly “uncorrelated assets” move in unison with them, according to Jason Zweig’s Wall Street Journal article, “Caging Raging Contagion.” Such a significant move occurred last week when the Italian government and bonds collapsed over its fiscal problems, and everything else fell, too.

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Hedge Fund Heroes Getting Battered

November 7, 2011 by Page Perry, LLC

Unfortunately, many investors are experiencing first hand the truism that hedge fund managers rarely outperform the market on consistent basis.

John Paulson, the hedge fund manager who made a killing when Goldman Sachs let him select bad CDO assets, which he turned around and bet against, is having a tough time in 2011. His hedge fund has declined nearly 50% this year as a result of a massive positions in Bank of America, which had lost half of its value by October, Rupert Murdoch’s scandal-plagued News Corp., which owns Fox News, and Sino-Forest Corp., which imploded after an accounting scandal.

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Alternative Investments - High Risk 'Pigs in a Poke'

October 21, 2011 by Page Perry, LLC

Many investors in alternative investments are in for unpleasant surprises. Alternative investments are very popular these days, as traditional stock and bond investments are not doing well. Alternative Investments include a wide variety of investments that fall outside the traditional stock and bond categories. Examples include structured products (such as principal protected notes and reverse convertibles); hedge funds; private equity; nontraded REITs; niche, leveraged, inverse leveraged, and synthetic exchange traded funds; and many others.

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The Performance of Alternative Funds Leaves Much to be Desired

October 13, 2011 by Page Perry, LLC

While alternative funds have grown in popularity, they have not lived up to their hype. Mutual funds composed of alternative investments have proliferated in recent years and brokerage firms have sold billions of dollars of them as a way to combat low returns and high volatility that have soured investors away from traditional stock and bond investments. There are reportedly 251 alternative-style mutual funds and 303 alternative exchange traded funds, according to Morningstar.

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