Globe and Mail: Canadian institutions that use ETFs allocate an average 18.8 per cent of total assets to the funds, up from 15.2 per cent last year and the highest globally, according to Greenwich Associates.
Globe and Mail: Canadian institutions that use ETFs allocate an average 18.8 per cent of total assets to the funds, up from 15.2 per cent last year and the highest globally, according to Greenwich Associates.
Traders: “...the pension community has yet to widely embrace a variety of well-proven options strategies that could improve returns while still minimizing risk,” said Richard Johnson.
Benefits Canada: Canadian institutional investors that use exchange-traded funds allocate an average 18.8% of total assets to them, according to research by Greenwich Associates.
FT: Greenwich Associates estimates that a fifth of all investment-grade US corporate bond trades are now done electronically — almost double the volume of a decade ago.
Risk.net: Kevin McPartland, said the “biggest surprise” by far was the continued upward trajectory of risk and portfolio technology spend...
WSJ: Greenwich Associates, an industry research firm, estimated that budgets for research have dropped by $300 million.
Institutional Investor: Greenwich Associates found that 81% of institutions were satisfied with the performance of the options strategies they employ.
American Banker: Duncan Banfield said, “In many cases we hear through our research that clients are constantly being asked through different parts of the bank, for reasons that aren’t ever all that clear, for the types of information that are being...
P&I: Richard Johnson wrote that institutional investors are using listed options to protect their portfolio following a long bull market, to increase income from investment holdings and to improve their overall risk-return profile.
ETF Strategy: Andrew McCollum commented, “With market volatility on the upswing and interest rates in key markets around the world expected to climb, Greenwich Associates expects this growth in ETF use and allocation to continue over a longer-term...