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Registered Rep. June 1, 2004 Stan Luxenberg |
Escape Is Rarely the Safest Bet Don't tell Brandywine Fund that fleeing stocks for cash is a safe, conservative maneuver. Several mutual funds now have a substantial portion of their assets in cash. Is this a good idea?  |
Financial Advisor June 2004 Eric L. Reiner |
Past Results Really May Indicate Future Returns Professors successfully apply statistical technique to picking mutual funds.  |
Financial Advisor June 2004 Marla Brill |
The Cash Conundrum Should fund managers let cash build or stay fully invested at all times?  |
Financial Advisor June 2004 Marla Brill |
Higher Commodity Prices Are Here To Stay Fund manager Leigh Goehring believes we are in the early stages of a bull market for commodities that could last for several years.  |
Financial Advisor June 2004 Gary Schneider |
Fund Industry Being Forced In Wrong Direction In the aftermath of some of America's biggest scandals in the history of the mutual fund industry, proposed standards are wrongheaded and unnecessary.  |
Wall Street & Technology June 4, 2004 Jessica Pallay |
Fund Fixes Mutual funds are taking action to prepare for potential regulations on market timing, but there aren't any easy answers.  |
Registered Rep. June 2, 2004 Will Leitch |
SEC Passes Breakpoint Amendment---With an `Ethics' Twist The Securities and Exchange Commission has issued its long-awaited amendments on breakpoints (sales-charge discounts on mutual funds), and the end result of months of deliberations surprised no one.  |
The Motley Fool June 1, 2004 Shannon Zimmerman |
Slam-Dunk Mutual Funds Here's your game plan for finding the best funds out there. Call it hubris, but the author wants to be the Shaquille O'Neal of fund analysis. Here's his game plan.  |
The Motley Fool May 27, 2004 Bill Mann |
Dick Strong: How Sorry Are You? With Wells Fargo buying his company, Strong can now pay a big SEC fine out of his lint drawer.  |
The Motley Fool May 25, 2004 Martin Hutchinson |
Japan: Recovery at Last Is now finally the time to buy into Japan? Japan had a bubble in the late 1980s, like the U.S. had in the late 1990s. Now, after 13 years of decline, the market's 70% off its peak and looks like a buy for value investors.  |
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