
How Will Yelen Address the Recent Market Volatility?
Kevin McPartland previews Fed Chair Janet Yellen's two-day testimony before Congress. He speaks with Bloomberg's Betty Liu on "Bloomberg Markets."
Kevin McPartland previews Fed Chair Janet Yellen's two-day testimony before Congress. He speaks with Bloomberg's Betty Liu on "Bloomberg Markets."
“While transparency in the financial markets has improved greatly since the crisis, the U.S. Treasury market, one of the most important markets in the world, still remains oddly opaque,” says Kevin McPartland.
Buyside compensation for 2014 was flat to just slightly higher than 2013 levels, falling short of market expectations for increases in the range of 5 to 10 percent according to Greenwich Associates.
Senior equities portfolio managers in long-only asset managers received an average of $630k in 2014, according to Greenwich Associates and Johnson Associates, while hedge fund managers earned $570k. Fixed income hedge funds still paid more with a $...
Market consultancy Greenwich Associates has announced its top 10 market structure trends to watch in 2016 with non-bank liquidity, blockchain technology and chat cited as the leading discussion topics.
Those two markets accounted for 54 percent of Asia broker commissions last year, from 46 percent a year earlier, according to researcher Greenwich Associates.
Greenwich Associates Principal Kevin McPartland and MSCI Chairman and CEO Henry Fernandez discuss liquidity and fixed income. They spoke on “Bloomberg <GO>".
Kevin McPartland, Principal at Greenwich Associates, and Henry Fernandez, MSCI Chairman and CEO, talk about perceived unfair advantages in equity markets. They spoke on “Bloomberg <GO>'.
A recent study by Greenwich Associates found that when companies are confronted with critical business issues or decisions, bankers are called upon for guidance far less frequently than other resources.
That’s the message from Greenwich Associates heading into 2016, after a year dominated by concern that risks previously housed at big banks have gravitated to fund managers that could struggle to return investors’ money during a market rout.