Retail investors are increasingly demanding responsible investments as part of their portfolios. Retail investors also, generally, require the services of an advisor. This article argues that traditional mutual funds, while structurally able to provide responsible investments, have not provided responsible holdings to their mass affluent retail investing clientele. While institutional investors, and certain very wealthy retail investors, have a multitude of options to avail themselves of responsible investments, mass affluent retail investors have less of an ability to invest responsibly. Advisors and investors do not have access to the majority of responsible investments, nor are advisors adequately trained or properly compensated to provi...
This Article contends that more effective regulation of investment advisers could be achieved by rec...
In an article published last year in this journal, we invited attention to the legal implications of...
The American retail investor is dying. In 1950, retail investors owned over 90% of the stock of U.S....
Retail investors are increasingly demanding responsible investments as part of their portfolios. Ret...
In recent years, the growth of the institutional portfolio (i.e., funds managed by mutual funds, ins...
For the first time in an era, new investment products for smaller ( retail ) investors are emerging...
Fiduciaries who invest assets held by a charity must act as prudent investors. This Article exami...
Access to private funds is limited to an elite class of investors -- wealthy individuals and large i...
This Article argues that existing regulation of mutual funds has serious shortcomings. In particular...
(Excerpt) For the retail investor in the United States, generally two options are available for seek...
Decades of short-term thinking and regulatory fixes created the bewilderingly complex statutory and ...
Ethical investment is a small but growing market, particularly for retail Ethical Investment product...
Working with one of the largest brokerages in Germany, we record what happens when unbiased investme...
The GameStop trading frenzy in January 2021 was perhaps the highest profile example of the reemergen...
This Article contends that more effective regulation of investment advisers could be achieved by rec...
In an article published last year in this journal, we invited attention to the legal implications of...
The American retail investor is dying. In 1950, retail investors owned over 90% of the stock of U.S....
Retail investors are increasingly demanding responsible investments as part of their portfolios. Ret...
In recent years, the growth of the institutional portfolio (i.e., funds managed by mutual funds, ins...
For the first time in an era, new investment products for smaller ( retail ) investors are emerging...
Fiduciaries who invest assets held by a charity must act as prudent investors. This Article exami...
Access to private funds is limited to an elite class of investors -- wealthy individuals and large i...
This Article argues that existing regulation of mutual funds has serious shortcomings. In particular...
(Excerpt) For the retail investor in the United States, generally two options are available for seek...
Decades of short-term thinking and regulatory fixes created the bewilderingly complex statutory and ...
Ethical investment is a small but growing market, particularly for retail Ethical Investment product...
Working with one of the largest brokerages in Germany, we record what happens when unbiased investme...
The GameStop trading frenzy in January 2021 was perhaps the highest profile example of the reemergen...
This Article contends that more effective regulation of investment advisers could be achieved by rec...
In an article published last year in this journal, we invited attention to the legal implications of...
The American retail investor is dying. In 1950, retail investors owned over 90% of the stock of U.S....