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RIYADH — Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson said the firm is focused on doing right by its clients, in her first public comments after the company saw its worst quarter for financial outflows in its history and the Securities and Exchange Commission started a probe into suspicious trading at its fixed-income unit. Franklin Templeton's fixed-income business has also dealt with years of underperformance, which many investors expected to reverse course as money moves into bonds and other fixed-income products, which make up about 30% of the firm's assets. Johnson told CNBC Wednesday that the issue with Western Asset Management was damaging, but stressed that it stemmed from an isolated case, and that supporting clients was Franklin Templeton's top focus. "We've had an issue at Western which is isolated to an individual and a subset of strategies, but there's definitely been outflows in those strategies," Johnson told CNBC's Dan Murphy in Riyadh. "I mean, the good news — Western has a significant amount of other strategies that are outside of this and have a lot of global clients there, but we've definitely been hurt by the issues on those three strategies."
Persons: Franklin Templeton, Jenny Johnson, Ken Leech, Franklin Templeton's, Johnson, Franklin, We've, CNBC's Dan Murphy Organizations: Securities and Exchange Commission, Western Asset Management, SEC, Financial Times, CNBC Wednesday, Franklin Templeton's Locations: RIYADH, California, outflows, Riyadh
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailConsolidation of the Taiwanese financial industry is a good sign: Cathay Financial HoldingsChang-Ken Lee, president of Taiwan's biggest financial conglomerate, Cathay Financial Holdings, says he welcomes rate cuts from the Fed & global central banks. He also weighs in on the Taiwan's transforming financial industry.
Persons: Cathay Financial Holdings Chang, Ken Lee Organizations: Cathay Financial Holdings, Fed
Dec 22 (Reuters) - Tesla (TSLA.O) Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said on Thursday he will not sell any more Tesla stock for another two years. Musk has previously made promises about not selling Tesla stock before subsequently selling it. "I needed to sell some stock to make sure, like, there's powder dry...to account for a worst case scenario," the billionaire said. Musk said that Tesla is close to picking the location of its new "Gigafactory." "(Twitter) is maybe 10% of the complexity of Tesla," Musk said.
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