Asset Management

Video: Natixis’s Hailer Says Funds Moving Assets Out of Bonds

April 1, 2011

April 1 (Bloomberg) — John Hailer, chief executive officer of North America and Asia operations at Natixis Global Asset Management, talks about investment fund flows. Hailer speaks with Matt Miller and Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. Senior Economist Ellen Zentner on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Turner, Milligan, Adams Discuss Japanese Investments

March 29, 2011

March 29 (Bloomberg) — Mike Turner, head of strategy at Aberdeen Asset Management Plc, Andrew Milligan, head of global strategy at Standard Life Investments, and Ken Adams, head of strategy at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership, discuss investing in Japan. They spoke with Bloomberg’s Rodney Jefferson in Edinburgh on March 23. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: MQS’s Gelfond Says Fed Is Keeping Interest Rates Too Low

March 28, 2011

March 28 (Bloomberg) — Bob Gelfond, chief executive officer of MQS Asset Management, talks about the U.S. economy and Federal Reserve monetary policy. He speaks with Julie Hyman on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Aronstein Expects `Aggressive’ Fed Talk Before Summer

March 25, 2011

March 25 (Bloomberg) — Michael Aronstein, president of Marketfield Asset Management, talks about the outlook for the U.S. stocks, economy and Federal Reserve policy. He speaks with Matt Miller, Carol Massar, Adam Johnson and Sheila Dharmarajan on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Aronstein Expects `Aggressive’ Fed Talk Before Summer

March 25, 2011

March 25 (Bloomberg) — Michael Aronstein, president of Marketfield Asset Management, talks about the outlook for the U.S. stocks, economy and Federal Reserve policy. He speaks with Matt Miller, Carol Massar, Adam Johnson and Sheila Dharmarajan on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: LVAM’s Hillier Favors Equities Over Treasuries on Japan

March 21, 2011

March 21 (Bloomberg) — Piers Hillier, chief investment officer at Liverpool Victoria Asset Management, talks about the outlook for Japanese equities and his investment strategy. He speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: Levy Sees U.S. Exports to Brazil Growing With Economy

March 18, 2011

March 18 (Bloomberg) — Former Brazilian Treasury Secretary Joaquim Levy, now a strategist at Bradesco Asset Management, talks about the outlook for trade between Brazil and the U.S. on the eve of President Obama’s visit to the country, and the outlook for Brazil’s economy. Levy speaks with Mark Crumpton on Bloomberg Television’s “Bottom Line.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Japan’s Economy Will Avoid A Meltdown

March 17, 2011

TOKYO (Reuters) – In these dark hours, Japan would do well to heed former White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel’s memorable maxim that you never want a serious crisis to go to waste. As the nation struggles to avert a nuclear catastrophe on the heels of a deadly earthquake and tsunami, it takes a huge leap of faith to foresee any positives emerging from the triple disaster for a stagnant, rapidly aging and heavily indebted economy. Yet a number of experts say the disaster might — just might — shake Japan out of its collective economic and political torpor of the past two decades and provide a new sense of purpose for a nation that has seemingly lost its way. They also say that widespread fear of a Japanese fiscal death spiral is mostly overblown. Masaru Hamasaki, a senior strategist at Toyota Asset Management in Tokyo, said the severity of the challenge facing Japan should not be underestimated. The numbers killed in last Friday’s quake centered on Sendai in northeastern Japan will far exceed the 6,400 toll from the 1995 temblor in Kobe. Many more people have been affected directly and indirectly, for instance by power cuts and the risk of radioactive fallout from the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. The usually bustling streets of Tokyo were eerily empty this week. And the economy is even less vigorous than in 1995, smack in the middle of Japan’s so-called Lost Decade. “But out of this crisis affecting a large part of the population, a sense of ‘public morality’ is already building up,” Hamasaki said. “If the country’s leaders can harness this spirit in the long term, then I’m sure Japan will move in a positive direction.” This civic duty, an impulse of shared responsibility, is likely to count for more than any spreadsheet in trying to assess the impact on Japan’s bond markets of financing the still unknowable bill of rebuilding after the quake, the strongest on record here. Some pundits fear that adding substantially to a gross debt burden that is already more than twice Japan’s national output will be the straw that breaks the bond market’s back. “The debt will rise significantly. Until now, the country could finance its obligations at relatively low rates. If additional debts come on top now, there will be questions about solvency,” Peter Bofinger, a member of Germany’s “wisemen” council of economic advisers, said in an interview with the German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung published on Monday. Economics Minister Kaoru Yosano has acknowledged that, unless it changes its ways, Japan faces a fiscal dead end. But the Sendai quake is very unlikely to trigger that day of reckoning. NO FOREIGN MONEY NEEDED On paper, Japan’s liabilities will hit 204 percent of GDP this calendar year, larger than 137 percent for Greece and 113 percent for Ireland, according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). But Japan is not about to follow Greece and Ireland into the emergency debt ward. Both countries have needed a bailout arranged by the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund. For a start, the government owes nearly half of the debt to other arms of the government such as the Japan Post Bank and the Government Pension Investment Fund. The Bank of Japan also owns a tidy chunk of Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs). Net debt, taking account also of Japan’s official foreign reserves, will reach 120 percent of GDP this year, according to the OECD. That will be the highest among major economies, but the burden is not significantly greater than that shouldered by Belgium and Italy in the 1990s, both of which avoided a sovereign debt crisis. True, net debt has risen sharply from 80 percent of GDP in 2007, and the government is running a budget deficit of close to 10 percent of GDP even before counting the cost of the quake. But whereas about 70 percent of Greece’s public debt is held by foreigners, domestic investors hold 95.4 percent of Japan’s bonds. This gives Tokyo’s policymakers a huge advantage. “They have much more room to maneuver than Greece or Ireland would have in similar circumstances,” said Marcus Noland of the Peterson Institute of International Economics in Washington. “One has to assume Japanese residents are a much less footloose debt-owning class than, say, London hedge funds.” Quite apart from the fact that low-yielding JGBs have proved a good investment in recent deflationary years, Noland expects banks, insurers and pension funds will readily accede if the government asks them to buy extra quake reconstruction bonds. In a country with a high degree of social cohesion, the loyalty of individual investors in Japan’s hour of need can also be taken for granted. “If the government says ‘we’re going to tighten our belts; cut expenditure in other areas and shift spending to rebuild Sendai; and we’re going to issue more bonds at the margin to make that happen’, I simply do not believe the Japanese public is going to dump Japanese bonds,” Noland said. Jeremy Lawson, an economist with the Institute of International Finance, a lobby group for global banks in Washington, agreed. The trajectory of Japan’s debt is unsustainable, but, in the short term, “domestic residents may display even greater willingness to lend to the government as an act of national solidarity,” Lawson said in a report. A RICH, AGING SOCIETY That’s today, though. What about the future? If Japan’s households are avid buyers of bonds, it is because they are sitting on a mountain of savings — some 1,400 trillion yen ($17,320 billion), compared with approximately 870 trillion yen in outstanding long-term government bonds. Japanese workers built up that huge nest egg as they toiled successfully to rebuild their country from the ashes of World War Two. But the young workforce that catapulted Japan ahead of West Germany in the 1960s to become the world’s second-largest economy is now aging fast. Pensioners are now spending those savings. Little noticed by the rest of the world, Japan’s household savings rate has in fact already plunged to about 3 percent of disposable income from a peak of 18 percent in the early 1980s. Despite the government’s big budget deficit, Japan still enjoys surplus national savings, reflected in a current account surplus, thanks to high corporate savings and a large income stream from its overseas investments. Japan is the world’s largest creditor nation, with net external assets of 225.5 trillion yen, according to official figures. The question preoccupying economists is how long it will take for the savings rate to erode and drive the current account into deficit. At that point, Japan will have to import capital to balance its books. That’s when unexpected shocks like the Sendai quake could trigger a financial as well as a humanitarian crisis by undermining the confidence of foreign investors. “Without policy adjustment, the space for household assets to absorb public debt will continue to shrink over the medium term,” said Kiichi Tokuoka, an economist with the International Monetary Fund. In a January 2010 working paper, he said Japan’s gross public debt could exceed households’ gross financial assets by 2015 or 2020, depending on the accounting treatment. “Although these results do not imply any specific turning point for public debt financing, they suggest that if current trends continue, domestic financing could become more difficult toward the mid-2010s, placing a premium on other sources of funding, including from overseas,” he wrote. BE BOLD George Magnus, senior economic adviser to UBS in London, guessed that three years was too short a time for Japan to reach the turning point. But 10 years was too long because the aging of the workforce was inexorable. “At some point in the medium term, I do think there’s a sporting possibility that Japan will start to run trade deficits and have to start selling debt abroad,” said Magnus, the author of a study on the economics of aging. “And that probably is when the crunch will come, because people will want to see Japan taking material measures to manage its public debt over the longer term.” Crucially, no respected economist is arguing that Japan should think twice about spending right away whatever is needed to put the economy back on its feet. One of the lessons from the recession brought on by the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers in 2008 is that the increase in the public debt ratio in Japan and other countries was not due to fiscal spending to stimulate the economy. Rather, it was more due to the abrupt slowdown in economic growth. The government should do the same today, said Sebastian Mallaby, an economist with the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. “It should be willing to act aggressively to increase the budget deficit in order to have the money to rebuild the damaged areas promptly,” he wrote on CFR’s website. “Now is not the time for being cautious or conservative. Now is the time for a bold response, and I’ve got every reason to think that they will do that,” he added. POLITICAL MESS When the time comes to rein in the budget deficit, Japan already knows from years of experience what Greece and Ireland and other countries are just discovering: there is no secret recipe. It’s “simply” a question of agreeing on a politically acceptable mix of tax increases and spending cuts. The IMF and other agencies have zoomed in on Japan’s low rate of consumption tax, five percent, as the most promising candidate to raise the revenue needed to help stabilize the government’s debt-to-GDP ratio. In its 2010 review of Japan, the Fund projected that by 2015 gross debt would reach 250 percent, and net debt 154 percent, unless there was a shift in policy. The government could raise some 2.5 trillion yen for each 1 percentage point rise in the consumption tax. But a hamstrung political process has hobbled policymaking. Prime Minister Naoto Kan is the fifth man to hold the job since 2006, and his popularity ratings have been sinking like a stone, further reducing his chances of getting budget bills through a split parliament. Indeed, just hours before Friday’s earthquake, Kan, accused of illegally receiving campaign funds, was rebuffing calls from an emboldened opposition for his resignation. The tantalizing question now is whether the Sendai tragedy will change not only Japan’s economic and fiscal outlook but also its politics. “Kan needs to show his leadership to craft a big supplementary budget. This is the time to show his leadership by gathering ideas from the ruling and opposition parties very quickly,” said Hamasaki, the Toyota Asset Management strategist. POLITICAL GAME-CHANGER? Pessimists suspect any political truce sealed in a moment of national solidarity will be short-lived once reconstruction is under way and the economy is recouping the output lost due to the disaster. After all, the bursting of Japan’s asset bubble in the early 1990s failed to jolt the political class into enacting the difficult structural reforms the economy needed. Japan’s nominal GDP is stuck at the level it was at in 1992. But Noland with the Peterson Institute for International Economics said that successful crisis management on Kan’s part would go a long way toward reassuring voters still unsure whether his Democratic Party of Japan is a credible alternative to the Liberal Democratic Party. The LDP has governed Japan for most of the past 60 years. It lost power to the DPJ in 2009. “Cementing a real two-party system could create ‘more normal’ politics and push Japan into becoming a truly modern, functioning democracy in the 21st century,” Noland said. “It would make governance more complicated, but it would bring issues such as the coddling of the agricultural sector, immigration reform and defense policies out into the open in a much more transparent, democratic way,” he added. The alternative is that Sendai turns out to be Japan’s “Katrina” moment, Noland said, referring to the U.S. authorities’ ineffectual initial response to the hurricane that ravaged New Orleans in 2005. “If they do a bad job, then Japan’s aging and risk-averse electorate could go flocking back to the LDP and essentially re-establish the status quo ante of the last 60 years,” he said. Seen in this light, the implications for Japan’s economy and investment outlook are profound. Like everyone, Jim O’Neill, chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management in London, is waiting to see how fast-changing events at the Fukushima plant play out. But he said the crisis could act as a catalyst in much the same way that the second oil price shock of the late 1970s prompted an all-out national effort by Japan to improve energy efficiency. “My hunch is that this is so big it will galvanize change and force Japan’s leaders to do more,” he said in an email. (Additional reporting by Chikafumi Hodo and Stanley White in Tokyo and Noah Barkin in Berlin; editing by Jim Impoco and Claudia Parsons) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Video: Wirtz Sees Up to 10% Stock Pullback Over Next Two Weeks

March 11, 2011

March 11 (Bloomberg) — Keith Wirtz, chief investment officer at Fifth Third Asset Management Inc., discusses the potential economic impact of the earthquake in Japan on global stocks. Wirtz speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Cockerill Says Mistake to Think China `Can Do No Wrong’

March 7, 2011

March 7 (Bloomberg) — Tim Cockerill, head of research at Ashcourt Rowan Asset Management Ltd., talks about the outlook for China’s economy and its transition to consumer-driven growth. He speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Janet Tavakoli: The Biggest Headache for Investors in Groupon and Facebook

March 2, 2011

Groupon makes its money by selling coupons for goods and services. It partners with local merchants. When you buy a coupon for a merchant’s discount on Groupon, it reportedly takes a 50% cut in the U.S. Groupon has had a few embarrassments . On Valentine’s Day, FTD’s flowers were priced lower than Groupon’s “deals” and the online discounter had to apologize to customers. Moreover, merchants often put conditions and restrictions on Groupon discounts that dilute the value of the deal, similar to restrictions on redeeming air miles. Even so Groupon’s valuations have ranged from $1.2 billion to $6 billion to $15 billion all in the space of a year. What’s it really worth? More on that later. Facebook is free and “always will be.” It makes its money from ads and revenues from games (if users don’t block them), albeit phone apps so far do not display ads. Michael Arrington at Techcrunch reported that Facebook is secretly building its own phone to control its own operating system. He noted that Li Ka-Shing is a Facebook investor, and he is an investor in the rumored INQ and Spotify phone project. While Facebook may remain free, it would have to figure out a way to get users to pay their phone bills. Facebook has tremendous potential to exploit its 500 million users. In fact, one of Facebook’s fundraisers is a genius at exploitation. Goldman Sachs, the Great and Powerful Oz of Finance (just don’t look behind the curtain), has already opined on Facebook’s value. In January 2011, it valued Facebook at $50 billion when it sought to raise $1.5 billion in Facebook financing. Rich Teitelbaum of Bloomberg News reminded the financial world that Goldman Sachs Asset Management’s anemic track record suggests that Goldman may not be the best go-to source for putting a value on an asset. Despite Goldman’s public relations hype that it employs the “best and brightest,” it trailed the average return of its peer group in every category. Goldman has an incentive to dangle a high valuation on Facebook in front of clients: Jim Clark of Netscape and Silicon Graphics fame was irritated that Goldman wanted to fee stuff its Facebook offering with a 4 percent placement fee, a half percent expense fee, and a snatch-back of 5 percent of investors’ potential profits. A few months earlier, Clark had invested in Facebook through another financial firm at a lower price, and the other firm wouldn’t potentially gouge him with Goldman’s 5 percent pleasure-of-your-company tax. “I don’t think it’s reasonable,” Clark told Bloomberg. “It’s just another way for [Goldman] to make money from their clients.” The question remains whether Clark bought his stake at a reasonable price. ” Blankfein Flunks Asset Management as Clark Vows No More Goldman ,” by Richard Teitelbaum, Bloomberg News , January 24, 2011 In January 2011, SharesPost Inc. valued Facebook at $82.9 billion on the secondary exchange. Whatever price the market will pay today, one has to be concerned about what it will pay tomorrow. Even if the future value of Facebook is say, $4 billion, Goldman will rake in fees. Impermanent Value Both Facebook and Groupon became successes because they are web based networks that required few management skills, minimum capital to start, and there were no barriers to entry. That is also their biggest problem. The ugly truth is that no one can tell you what they are worth as businesses. Groupon’s successful-so-far revenue model is its curse. It’s both trying to hold its position in “established” markets, and it’s trying to expand. The problem is that web users in other countries have noticed Groupon’s success and the fact that Groupon has been paying high premiums for local established discounting web sites just to get at the client distribution lists. Groupon’s competitors are both buying sites for the same reason as Groupon, and local entrepreneurs can easily copy Groupon’s business model. It seems all it takes is a good web developer, a two-page merchant agreement, and an accounting firm that can handle the taxes as a site expands internationally. Groupon may have a head start, but it has no long-term competitive advantage. That puts its margins, its market share, and it’s ability to expand and hold its position in new markets at risk. Smart investors look for highly skilled managers in industries with a long-term competitive advantage in a stable industry run by decision makers with a “here-today, here-forever” mentality. Between Groupon and Facebook, it seems Facebook has the better chance of making a case, but it hasn’t made one so far. Facebook seems to be thinking of ways to create a loyal user base by penetrating deep within its user base. It certainly has a shot, but it is unclear whether it can maintain a competitive advantage. Users are fickle, and young users will gravitate to the next exciting new thing. The rapid success of Catherine Cook’s myyearbook.com has to give investors pause. She started the site 6 years ago as a 16-year old high school student with a $250,000 investment from her brother, and the site is valued at $20 million. While it’s no threat to Facebook, it has a fresh look, is responsive to users, and offers new spins such as allowing users to buy each other gifts and “lunch money.” Investors may wonder when the next bright young kid will eat Facebook’s lunch and make it look like a site for old fogies in comparison. Facebook may adapt, but it would do itself favors by disclosing its revenues, and how it plans to face up to potential competitors. Update: ” Groupon Singled Out in Lawsuit: Man Claims Chicago-based Website Offers Illegal Gift Certificates ,” by Lacy McCrany, NBC Chicago, March 2, 2011.

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Fieldpoint Private Taps Chief Investment Officer

March 1, 2011

New CIO Paul C. Guidone, CFA Joins Fieldpoint Private as of February 2011; Distinguished Guidone to Propel Firm’s Growth and Asset Management

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FrontRange Solutions Appoints Scott Schoonover as Vice President of Americas

February 28, 2011

PLEASANTON, CA–(Marketwire – February 28, 2011) – FrontRange Solutions , the leading provider of IT Service Management, IT Asset Management and Customer Service Management solutions for both premise and cloud environments, today announced Scott Schoonover will join FrontRange Solutions as the new Vice President of Americas.

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Grubb & Ellis Restructures Troubled TIC Unit; Hires FBR Capital Markets To Identify Capital Sources

February 17, 2011

Grubb & Ellis Co. has created Daymark Realty Advisors Inc., a wholly owned and separately managed subsidiary that will now be responsible for managing the company’s entire tenant-in-common (TIC) portfolio and provide specialized management services to the owners of the tenant-in-common properties. As a result of the restructuring, Daymark Realty Advisors becomes one of the largest real estate asset management companies in the country, serving more…

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Grubb & Ellis Restructures Troubled TIC Unit; Hires FBR Capital Markets To Identify Capital Sources

February 17, 2011

Grubb & Ellis Co. has created Daymark Realty Advisors Inc., a wholly owned and separately managed subsidiary that will now be responsible for managing the company’s entire tenant-in-common (TIC) portfolio and provide specialized management services to the owners of the tenant-in-common properties. As a result of the restructuring, Daymark Realty Advisors becomes one of the largest real estate asset management companies in the country, serving more…

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Tony Acquadro Appointed Vice President of Institutional Markets for BTS Asset Management

February 14, 2011

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – February 14, 2011) – BTS Asset Management, of Lexington, MA, today announced that Tony C. Acquadro has been appointed Vice President of Institutional Markets. Founded in 1979, BTS is a Registered Investment Advisor and is one of the nation’s oldest third party money managers, providing risk management solutions for investors.

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Video: Wirtz Says Fifth Third Likes Industrial Cyclical Stocks

February 3, 2011

Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — Keith Wirtz, chief investment officer at Fifth Third Asset Management Inc., discusses the outlook for the stock market and investment strategy. Wirtz talks with Betty Liu, Jon Erlichman and Sheila Dharmarajan on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Dealing with Distress Head On, Lennar Turning a Healthy Profit

February 3, 2011

With the housing markets in distress, Miami-based homebuilder Lennar Corp. has proved correct the old adage that when life deals you a bunch of lemons, make lemonade. Lennar’s real estate investment management company focused on distressed real estate asset management and workouts, Rialto Capital, contributed $57.3 million in operating earnings to the company last year. That profit came on revenues of $125.3 million interest income on portfolios…

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Video: Richter Says Egypt Unrest Is `Opportunity’ for Investors

February 1, 2011

Feb. 1 (Bloomberg) — Sven Richter, managing director of frontier markets at Renaissance Asset Management, talks about the outlook for investments in the Middle East amid mounting protests agaisnt Egypt’s President Hosni Mubarak. He speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: Chervitz Says Google’s Executive Shakeup Is Positive

January 21, 2011

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) — Darren Chervitz, research director at Jacob Asset Management, talks about Google Inc.’s decision to name co-founder Larry Page chief executive officer, replacing Eric Schmidt. Chervitz, a Google shareholder, talks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Chervitz Says Google’s Executive Shakeup Is Positive

January 21, 2011

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) — Darren Chervitz, research director at Jacob Asset Management, talks about Google Inc.’s decision to name co-founder Larry Page chief executive officer, replacing Eric Schmidt. Chervitz, a Google shareholder, talks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Kroll Says U.S. Corporate Profits Will Be `OK’ in 2011

December 29, 2010

Dec. 29 (Bloomberg) — Steven Kroll, managing director at Monness Crespi Hardt & Co., and Michael Aronstein, president of Marketfield Asset Management, discuss the outlook for U.S. corporate profits. They speak with Julie Hyman and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (This report is an excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Donald Yacktman Says Largest Stocks Offer `Best Values’

December 29, 2010

Dec. 29 (Bloomberg) — Donald Yacktman, president and chief investment officer of Yacktman Asset Management, talks about investment opportunities in large-capitalization stocks. Yacktman speaks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Wirtz Likes Energy, Banking, Technology Industry Stocks

December 27, 2010

Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) — Keith Wirtz, chief investment officer at Fifth Third Asset Management, talks about his investment strategy. Wirtz, speaking with Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop,” also discusses China’s monetary policy and the U.S. economy. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Jim O’Neill Goldman Sachs Guru, Sees 2011 At ‘The Year Of The USA’

December 27, 2010

Jim O’Neill shot to fame by predicting the staggering rise of emerging-market economies. Now the head of Goldman Sachs (GS) Asset Management, O’Neill recommended investors buy into so called BRIC economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China a decade ago.

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Video: Buckingham Favors Lockheed, Tsakos Energy, Abbott Labs

December 21, 2010

Dec. 20 (Bloomberg) — John Buckingham, chief investment officer at Al Frank Asset Management Inc., discusses his investment strategy and opportunities in Lockheed Martin Corp., Tsakos Energy Navigation Ltd., Abbott Laboratories and Hudson City Bancorp. He talks with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stocks.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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