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  2. What happens to your investment accounts after you die? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/what-happens-to-investment...

    Individual taxable brokerage accounts. Your individual taxable investment account belongs only to you. That’s why adding a beneficiary to your individual account is the fastest way to transfer ...

  3. 2003 mutual fund scandal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2003_mutual_fund_scandal

    Under law, most mutual fund trades received after 4:00 p.m. must be executed at the following day's closing price, but because some orders placed before 4:00 p.m. cannot be executed until after 4:00 p.m., brokers can collude with investors and submit post-4:00 p.m. trades as if they had been placed before 4:00 p.m.

  4. Recovery of funds from the Madoff investment scandal

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recovery_of_funds_from_the...

    The Optimal SUS fund, one of Madoff's largest feeder funds, [83] agreed to pay $235 million, about 85% of the $285 million that the Geneva-based hedge fund group redeemed in the 90 days before Madoff was arrested. As of December 2008, Santander had $3.2 billion of clients' money invested with Madoff, a relationship that started in 1996.

  5. Equity Funding Corporation of America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_Funding_Corporation...

    In order to pay the premiums on the policies, Equity Funding created additional bogus policies that they would also sell. Sometimes they would claim the bogus policyholder died and then receive the death benefits from the reinsurance company. [3] The company's stock was over $28 per share on March 9, 1973.

  6. Life settlement funds: good investment, ghoulish, or a death ...

    www.aol.com/news/2009-09-16-life-settlement...

    Investors large and small are looking for a new way to return to the juicy profit level of sub-prime's heyday, and one product beginning to gain popularity is life settlement funds, AKA Grim ...

  7. Disgorgement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disgorgement

    Disgorgement is the act of giving up something on demand or by legal compulsion, for example giving up profits that were obtained illegally. [1]In United States regulatory law, disgorgement is often a civil remedy imposed by some regulatory agencies to seize illegally obtained profits.

  8. Robert Vesco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Vesco

    In 1970, Vesco began a successful takeover bid for Investors Overseas Service, Ltd., a mutual fund investment company with holdings of $1.5 billion managed by financier Bernard Cornfeld, who were in trouble with the SEC. When his company began to experience financial difficulty, no "white knight" was willing to get involved.

  9. Bill Gross knows a few things about the bond market. He co-founded the Pacific Investment Management Company (PIMCO) in 1971, where he managed the PIMCO Total Return Fund, which became one of the ...