Brazilian ETFs hit snag in Moody’s rating

Brokerdealer.com post made possible through ETFTrends.com 

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The iShares MSCI Brazil Capped ETF (NYSEArca: EWZ) and other Brazilian ETFs have been enjoying a mostly excellent 2014, but that ebullience has encountered some resistance in recent days. Investors’ willingness to stick by EWZ and Brazilian stocks in the run-up to next month’s national elections is being tested Tuesday after Moody’s Investors Service lowered its outlook on Brazil’s sovereign debt rating to negative from stable. Continue reading

Social Media and Financial Services; BrokerDealers Need To Know

A brokerdealer.com blog special article.

No longer are organizations and financial brands able to focus exclusively on email aliases, storefronts and toll free numbers for support and customer participation. Now, a brand must engage customers 24/7 in social media. However, as we have seen together with the rise in social media junk, the upsurge in social fraud, the continuing social account hacks and also the ever increasing regulatory focus on social websites, financial services’ social media programs endure the most comprehensive set of compliance challenges and hazards.

Actually, every one of the specific financial services sub-verticals including retail banking, insurance, wealth management, charge cards, etc., all tend to have two to three major categories of social media applications including centralized brand programs, adviser / agent programs and social customer care systems. Unfortunately, they may just be partially equipped to manage conformity and risk for just one of their social programs.

Brand plans confront regulations but in addition have a tendency to be exposed around account hacks deceitful accounts and social media junk. Social care plans have to worry about those same problems in addition to controlled and sensitive data managing of misdemeanors of FINRA Customer Criticism Dangers regulations or FFIEC Regulation Z and DD on top and PCI. Advisor and agent applications have to handle industry regulations like FFIEC FINRA, FTC and SEC, along with corporate standards including keeping the advisor or agent account protected and using approved employee bio data, approved publishing tool workflow.

Here are several best practices to help financial services organizations address the comprehensive set of compliance and danger challenges they confront in social media:
1. Don’t rely on keyword detection: manual workflows and Less accurate key word dictionaries do not scale. Technology that comprehends context and the content ought to be employed to automate detection, handling and improving retention and eDiscovery search for several compliance, legal and related content violations.
2. Define Policies & Organization Obligations: Create a cross-departmental working group defining and executing on who is responsible for applying them, creating policies and reacting to incidents across social systems.
3. Learn Compliance Context: Social marketers, IT teams and agents or brokers will not be naturally compliance specialists. Thus, they must be trained by external and internal compliance specialists, so they are informed regarding the circumstance of the regulations.
4.Shield Social Accounts: Maintain access control on social pages, profiles, and accounts by restricting what tools can publish to the report, protecting passwords and monitoring the account to discover and prevent account hacks.
With increasingly more resources being committed by financial services brands to social networking, the urgency grows with it each day. Without a serious strategy and investment in this more comprehensive set of compliance areas and social danger, financial services organizations will fight to efficiently and safely scale their social plans.

Financial tech Start-ups and their value

BrokerDealer.com blog update courtesy of financial industry publication TabbForum; those interested in fast-growth start-ups that have secured a presence within the trading technology space would want to visit OMEX Systems

FinTech disruption is in its early innings, particularly on the institutional side. But the number of exciting startups is growing. This growth is occurring due to the vast coverage of industries and asset classes that companies such as ChartIQ and OMEX Systems have been benefitting from clients that are looking to profit from the data they collect.

You’ve likely heard of companies such as Lending Club in the lending sector, Wealthfront for wealth management, and Square for payments. Companies such as these are reinventing very old processes in their respective sectors, and there are many more examples of technology firms like these that are gaining mainstream recognition. But there are thousands of startups reimagining much more niche functions in financial services, and many of them could be complementary or competitive to your own business.

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Banks dangle Carrot to Future Broker Dealers

Brokerdealer.com blog post made possible through the courtesy of the NYTimes and William Alden and Sydney Ember  

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Working on Wall Street once conferred a certain prestige, a path to riches and an oh-so-important swagger. The big-name investment banks had top candidates lining up at their recruiting tables and thousands of applicants for the few coveted spots for future broker dealers.

But that image held by future broker dealers has been clouded in recent years by horror stories of weekends spent at the office, frequent all-nighters and seemingly unsympathetic bosses.

Wall Street now finds itself with the public relations challenge of having to woo and retain young talent. As part of the effort, many new hires found out this week that they could be paid roughly 20 percent more than their counterparts were offered last year.

The reason: The top banks, after decades of easily attracting the best and brightest from Ivy League campuses, are now worried about losing their favored status, especially as companies likeGoogle and Facebook can offer similarly high pay combined with luxurious benefits. A rash of cuts, regulatory issues and other problems after the 2008 financial crisis has not helped. Continue reading

NYSE hits new year-to-date lows

Brokerdealer.com blog post courtesy of ETF Daily News and David Fabian.

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David Fabian: Yesterday marked a year-to-date low in NYSE trading volume despite the S&P 500 Index hitting a new all-time intra-day high above 2,000. Despite the fact that many stocks are seeing fewer buyers and sellers, the markets are continuing to build on this 5-year bull market in earnest. Continue reading