Search Results | Showing 1 - 10 of 77 results for "YouTube" |
| | ... take action against them for their conduct in the management of the fund. Woodford famously issued a tearful apology on YouTube when he said: "The situation that we were confronted with was that we were seeing a lot of outflow in the portfolio, as a ... |
| | | ... its website, a Finance News Network interview featuring then-product research and development manager Rachel White on YouTube, and during a presentation by White at a Finance News Network event which was later published online. The Ethically Conscious ... |
| | | ... against the failed Woodford Equity Income Fund. The case has dragged on since 2019, when fundie Mark Woodford went on YouTube to apologise to investors, whose money was trapped in the fund as it faced liquidity issues. Link announced to the ASX today ... |
| | | ... tip-offs for misleading endorsements. The ACCC is investigating social media platforms like Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, YouTube, Facebook, and Twitch. The consumer watchdog is also considering the involvement of advertisers, markers, brands, and social ... |
| | | ... of the Woodford fund. In June 2019, after years of underperformance, Neil Woodford issued an apology to investors via YouTube whose money was frozen as a result of liquidity issues. The liquidity issues stemmed from the fund having been invested largely ... |
| | | ... information from Google searches and 41% reported sourcing information from social media and networking platforms, including YouTube (20%), Facebook (11%), podcasts (10%) and financial influencers (10%). Specifically pertaining to financial influencers ... |
| | | ... the fifth most relied upon source of financial advice, with one in four Gen Zs sourcing their information primarily from YouTube (59.9%) and Instagram (55.6%). Almost 60% of Gen Z aren't aware at all that they can access free advice from their fund. |
| | | ... began underperforming and became illiquid. WEIF made global headlines in 2019 when its fund manager Neil Woodford made a YouTube apology for its troubles. Leigh Day partner Boz Michalowska said: "This is a big step forward in the legal action which we ... |
| | | ... capturing the Millennial market, the first step is using different channels like social media, podcasts, review sites and YouTube is much more likely to generate leads. They key, however, is authenticity. "Even if you're not doing proactive advertising ... |
| | | ... investors requested to yank out funds. It garnered global attention in 2019 when its fund manager Neil Woodford made a YouTube apology for its poor performance and liquidity concerns. "When the fund began underperforming from late 2016, increasing numbers ... |
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