The most frequently asked questions by Robinhood traders reveal ‘new type of uninformed equity-market participant’ MarketWatch 3/14/2021
What happens when Robinhood traders walk out of the stock market?
That’s not the start of a joke. It’s the premise of a new study looking at how young investors on the high-profile trading app with $0 commissions were generating market volatility and “noise” long before the GameStop stock-trading frenzy blared into the headlines earlier this year.
Stocks held by many Robinhood investors had fewer trades and less price volatility when some users of the app were sidelined by platform outages last year, according to Oklahoma State University and Emory University researchers.
Press release content from Business Wire. The AP news staff was not involved in its creation.
USD 6.5 Billion Advisor Team Joins UBS Private Wealth Management in Los Angeles
February 5, 2021 GMT
LOS ANGELES (BUSINESS WIRE) Feb 5, 2021
UBS Private Wealth Management in Los Angeles announced today that a seven-person team, “The Legacy Multi-Family Group,” joined the firm in Century City.
The team, led by Patrick Schaffer and Ryan Bristol, have four decades of combined experience. They join UBS following nine years at J.P. Morgan Private Bank, where they built a successful USD 6.5 billion business focusing on high-net-worth families, individuals, foundations, and privately held businesses. The team includes Financial Advisors Barry Peterson, Corey Mazza and Dhanesh Bharvani, Relationship Manager Basel Sbeini, and Senior Wealth Strategy Associate Shauna Kohanchi.
UGA Football: Keith Marshall looks to tap into next generation of capitalism bizjournals.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bizjournals.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
January 28, 2021
Conventional wisdom holds that cleaning up a company’s environmental record is more expensive than paying fines, settling with plaintiffs, or dodging the liability altogether. That understanding guided decades of corporate behavior, from dumping carcinogens into California’s drinking water supply to faking emission tests on diesel cars.
But a growing body of research challenges that notion. Since 2015, studies have suggested that the cost of improving a company’s environmental record is no cost at all, but rather an investment that boosts profits, efficiency, and competitiveness.
Fanny Hermundsdottir and Arild Aspelund, researchers at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, reviewed more than 100 scientific papers published between 2005 and 2020 measuring the correlation between firms’ investments in sustainability and their competitiveness. Their results, published in the