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Vale Garry Wyatt
|Garry Wyatt, the co-founder and chief executive of Insync Funds Management, has sadly passed away.
NRF appoints inaugural chief investment officer
|The National Reconstruction Fund has named its first chief investment officer.
First Bitcoin ETF to launch this week on ASX
|VanEck will make history this week as the first investment manager to launch a Bitcoin ETF on the ASX.
More Aussies anticipate renting in retirement: Vanguard
|An increasing number of Australians expect to be paying off a mortgage or forced to rent in retirement, according to the latest Vanguard How Australia Retires survey.
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![]() | Know the facts about lifetime annuitiesSaving for a happy retirement is Australia's #1 financial goal. Learn how LifeIncome can deliver more income, certainty, & choice. |
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![Phil Usher](https://media.financialstandard.com.au/prod/media/library/Contacts/cwyzorar-0002_featured_profile.png)
Phil Usher
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
FIRST NATIONS FOUNDATION
FIRST NATIONS FOUNDATION
Taking a gamble to steady the ship as chief executive of First Nations Foundation, Phil Usher has turned it into a more secure, self sustaining entity, far better equipped to empower First Nations people to achieve financial prosperity. Andrew McKean writes.
ASIC is taking an approach which puts them in the spotlight as a tough regulator. On balance they appear to be losing more court cases than they are winning at the moment.
So, for a self-identified and self-reported disclosure issue, Morningstar, much like a few of the other ones recently, gets dragged through the mud and ASIC gets a headline.
The regulators talk and talk about Risk Culture and fostering an environment of openness yet ASIC seems to be taking an approach which is contrary to all this. How many entities are now trying to find ways of not reporting given they know ASIC appears to have no tolerance for one-off minor breaches, which this appears to be?