Professors Langbein and Posner recently proposed that fiduciaries be allowed to invest in market funds under a relaxation of the prudent investor standard. But a relaxation of the selectivity requirements may be destructive of capital market efficiency and perhaps of the capital markets themselves
The problem of how to invest the funds of another is not new. While not intended as an investment gu...
There is growing interest within the investment community in what are known as index or market f...
Trustees\u27 conventional investment practices may be producing inadequate results in view of the g...
Professors Langbein and Posner recently proposed that fiduciaries be allowed to invest in market fun...
Trustees, like all investors, are exposed to a wide-ranging marketplace of investment vehicles, tech...
Part I of this article presents a brief history of the prudent man standard and explores the meaning...
A Review of Modern Investment Management and the Prudent Man Rule by Bevis Longstret
This paper investigates the effect of changes in state prudent trust investment laws on asset alloca...
Professor Gordon examines a seeming paradox: How did a rule named for the prudent man, with its co...
This Article is meant to serve as a guide to the Uniform Prudent Investor Act. I point to the main r...
The prudent investor rule, enacted in every state over the last 30 years, is the centerpiece of fidu...
The ongoing financial crisis is largely explained by the fact that organizational rules and governan...
The ongoing financial crisis is largely explained by the fact that organizational rules and governan...
In an article published last year in this journal, we invited attention to the legal implications of...
The “prudent man” or “prudent person” rule governing trust investments is one of the oldest rules in...
The problem of how to invest the funds of another is not new. While not intended as an investment gu...
There is growing interest within the investment community in what are known as index or market f...
Trustees\u27 conventional investment practices may be producing inadequate results in view of the g...
Professors Langbein and Posner recently proposed that fiduciaries be allowed to invest in market fun...
Trustees, like all investors, are exposed to a wide-ranging marketplace of investment vehicles, tech...
Part I of this article presents a brief history of the prudent man standard and explores the meaning...
A Review of Modern Investment Management and the Prudent Man Rule by Bevis Longstret
This paper investigates the effect of changes in state prudent trust investment laws on asset alloca...
Professor Gordon examines a seeming paradox: How did a rule named for the prudent man, with its co...
This Article is meant to serve as a guide to the Uniform Prudent Investor Act. I point to the main r...
The prudent investor rule, enacted in every state over the last 30 years, is the centerpiece of fidu...
The ongoing financial crisis is largely explained by the fact that organizational rules and governan...
The ongoing financial crisis is largely explained by the fact that organizational rules and governan...
In an article published last year in this journal, we invited attention to the legal implications of...
The “prudent man” or “prudent person” rule governing trust investments is one of the oldest rules in...
The problem of how to invest the funds of another is not new. While not intended as an investment gu...
There is growing interest within the investment community in what are known as index or market f...
Trustees\u27 conventional investment practices may be producing inadequate results in view of the g...