
Fund managers seek more insight from benchmark data
Investment Executive: As costs for benchmark index data rise, managers need to extract more value from that data, suggests new data from Greenwich Associates.
Investment Executive: As costs for benchmark index data rise, managers need to extract more value from that data, suggests new data from Greenwich Associates.
Bloomberg: Kevin McPartland remembered being impressed with Raazi's idea a few years ago...
Institutional Investor: “Managers with strong three- and five-year track records would be at risk of pricing themselves out of business, while managers with strong recent performance might be too cautious about increasing fees, leaving money on...
Business Insider: "It's somewhat of a question of, 'Hey, do we take a premium now that can be negotiated?' versus going ahead on our own strategy, purchasing Refinitiv, and perhaps creating something that is a multiple of whatever that premium now...
MarketsMedia: The Demystifying Alternative Data study by Greenwich Associates found that 71% of asset managers believe that using alternative data gives them an investing edge over competitors.
Der Treasurer: Diese Unsicherheit trifft auch Unternehmen: Einer aktuellen Umfrage der US-Beratung Greenwich unter 61 Treasurern europäischer Firmen zufolge gibt ein Viertel an, der Brexit habe bereits jetzt negative Folgen für ihr Geschäft.
Traders: “Trading firms are overwhelmed with unstructured data as they have many forms of communication, such as the phone, emails and chat,” said Richard Johnson.
FXStreet: In May 2019, Greenwich Associates released a report to demonstrate institutional investment in digital assets are likely to increase over the next five years.
Financial News: Tobias Miarka said: “A series of Brexit-triggered changes in corporate demand and preferences appear to be lining up as new headwinds for UK banks as they prepare to compete in a post-Brexit Europe.”
MarketWatch: Many investment firms are still “getting their feet wet” when it comes to using data from alternative sources, said Richard Johnson.