Wealth managers and their clients waking up to the EU referendum result this morning are facing their worst case scenario in terms of the investment landscape. Sterling has hit its lowest level since 1985 and global markets are in freefall after the UK...
David Stevenson asks whether investors should be embracing more stock market risk.
My guess is that the 'bored-o-meter' is currently flashing at extreme levels for the average UK equity investor.
Never have so many people been looking for so few facts and found none. This could just about sum up the debate about the EU referendum, which is thankfully nearly over - bar the voting.
The airline industry is one of the safest in the world, which always seems a fairly ironic statement given some of the air disasters that have made the news in recent years.
Many column inches have been written about the dangers of key man risk for asset managers, but what about the other side of the coin: the perils of not having well-known individuals attached to a fund?
Who is afraid of Donald Trump? Or, for that matter, Hillary Clinton? Not the US stockmarket, it seems.
Neptune to launch a wealth arm