Expert Investor Belgium Photo Gallery
Here is a selection of photos take at Expert Investor Belgium, held in Brussels on 16 November 2017.
Here is a selection of photos take at Expert Investor Belgium, held in Brussels on 16 November 2017.
The best performing asset class of the past year will continue to shine in 2018. That’s the fund buyer consensus.
The smaller asset managers are, the more likely they will charge their clients for research under Mifid II, according to a fresh survey.
Global dividends grew at their fastest rate for more than three years in the third quarter of 2017, with the UK putting in the strongest performance, according to the latest Janus Henderson Global Dividend Index.
Most asset classes will provide investors with negative real returns going forward, according to US asset manager GMO. There’s just one exception to this rule.
Dylan Emery talks about Last Word’s ongoing research supporting both fund buyers and fund managers into a world in which ESG is getting increasingly important.
Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM) is the latest asset manager to venture into the ETF space. The British company has bought the $2.7bn (€2.3bn) European ETF platform run by ETF Securities. The acquisition is part of a wider push into Europe by LGIM.
At a recent Expert Investor conference in Belgium delegates were ask what assets they thought would best perform over the next 12 months. Here are the results.
There’s a yawning gap in opinions about ESG between American and European investors, a survey commissioned by the RBC Global Asset Management has shown.
With most global fixed income markets priced for perfection, investors are flocking to the one yield hold-out left: emerging market debt. But are investors really being compensated for the risk?
Investors have been hiking their allocations to risky assets since Donald Trump was elected US president exactly a year ago. But has Trump had any role in driving these flows?
US equity fund managers believe the S&P 500 can continue to add to a 26% rise over the past year. But barring good news to come out of Washington, there is little to cheer about for expensive US equities.