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Investment Management Definitions

April 7th, 2008 by tommy

Investment Management Definitions

Investment management is the professional management of various securities (shares, bonds etc) assets (e.g. real estate), to meet specified investment goals for the benefit of the investors. Investors may be institutions (insurance companies, pension funds, corporations etc.) or private investors (both directly via investment contracts and more commonly via collective investment schemes e.g. mutual funds) .

The term asset management is often used to refer to the investment management of collective investments, whilst the more generic fund management may refer to all forms of institutional investment as well as investment management for private investors. Investment managers who specialize in advisory or discretionary management on behalf of (normally wealthy) private investors may often refer to their services as wealth management or portfolio management often within the context of so-called “private banking”.

The provision of investment management services includes elements of financial analysis, asset selection, stock selection, plan implementation and ongoing monitoring of investments. Investment management is a large and important global industry in its own right responsible for caretaking of trillions of dollars, euro, pounds and yen. Coming under the remit of financial services many of the world’s largest companies are at least in part investment managers and employ millions of staff and create billions in revenue.

Fund manager (or investment advisor in the U.S.) refers to both a firm that provides investment management services and an individual(s) who directs “fund management” decisions.

== Process manager decide what to buy and when? (iii) How does the manager decide what to sell and when? (iv) Who takes the decisions and are they taken by committee? (v) What controls are in place to ensure that a rogue fund (one very different from others and from what is intended) cannot arise?

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A Look Back at Investing in 2003

April 4th, 2008 by tommy

continuing to own stocks in the face of the fifth consecutive down week (as of September 27th) in what is shaping up to be the third consecutive down year for the market.
Forgetting about the market for a moment, there is plenty to worry about.The United States may be going to war, terrorist attacks are still fresh on our minds, the economy is still trying to get some traction, and corporate honesty and financial reporting are not inspiring confidence.Why not just hang it up and buy bonds and CDs?
We will get to the answer in a few moments.The only thing that pleases us about the third quarter just past is that it has
ended. For the last full week of the quarter, the Dow fell 3.6%, the S&P was down 2.1%, and the NASDAQ Composite lost
1.8%. It was the fifth straight week that ended in a decline for the averages and capped a miserable quarter. The Dow and
NASDAQ posted their sixth straight monthly loss en route to a third consecutive losing quarter for the NASDAQ and the S&P.
The S&P index is now down 25% for the year, and the NASDAQ is down 40%.

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