The retirement software space is seeing increased signs of activity, as advisors seek more sophisticated tools to help clients plan a life after work. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Retirement Planning Space “Ripe for Modernization”.
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Before investing client assets, advisors are required to assess a client’s risk tolerance. If the investor takes on more risk than they can endure, they are likely to lose more money than they can stomach when the inevitable bear market comes. And even if the market recovers, there’s a risk that the investor will panic sell at the bottom of the market. To read the full article in Financial Planning, click: Risk Tolerance: The Misperception that Keeps Hurting Clients.
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The world is more hectic than ever. Busy professionals often struggle to escape the career treadmill, and omnipresent technology keeps us working around the clock. Dinnertimes eaten up by e-mails and weekends lost to client calls create a costly intrusion. When free time becomes scarce, family activities frequently get moved down the to-do list. To read the full article in the Journal of Accountancy, click: How to Create More Quality Family Time.
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When a male co-worker got too close for comfort, he drove a financial advisor to leave a regional brokerage firm where she had been working for years. He gave other female colleagues shoulder rubs that they “did not want, nor ask for,” said the advisor, who requested anonymity to share her story. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Wealth Management Fares Worst in Broad Study of Sexual Harassment.
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The new tax law could affect existing estate plans, so now is a good time to review documents with clients. Clients may need guidance in five areas, including the impact of the law on state-level estate taxes. To read the full article in Next Avenue, click: Five Questions to Ask Your Estate Planner After the New Tax Law.
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Some of the most disruptive business models that the world has ever known have succeeded through the use of cross-subsidies—the act of giving away for free something that consumers were previously paying for. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Fee Disruption is Coming.
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FASB issued technical corrections and improvements to its financial instruments standard on recognition and measurement of financial assets and liabilities that was originally issued in 2016. To read the full article in the Journal of Accountancy, click: FASB Issues Technical Corrections to Financial Instruments Standard.
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Some planners are adding language to grantor trusts that allows trustees to pay taxes directly or to reimburse grantors. This can dissuade grantors from turning off grantor trust status entirely, but there are certain IRS rules to consider. To read the full article in WealthManagement, click: Where are all the Grantor Trust Reimbursement Statutes?
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Alexa, can you be my financial planner? Artificial intelligence is getting more sophisticated, but where does that leave the professionals? I asked that question of my new device, a birthday present from my son. The answer? “I don’t know that.” But for how long? Just as other industries have been disrupted by technological advancement, so, too, will the financial industry. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Alexa, Can You be My Financial Planner?
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Wells Fargo has put an end to a well-publicized fight with a former retail bank manager who blew the whistle on its sham-accounts scheme that ultimately affected 3.5 million Americans. Both sides say they reached a settlement this month, though its terms are confidential. The agreement signals a possible shift in legal strategy for Wells as it appears to be the first instance in which the bank has voluntarily ended one of its lengthy fights with any of the whistleblowers it fired after they spoke up about the creation of fake accounts. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click:…
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How does the current performance of U.S. stocks compare to the long-run historic average? Since the stock market is essentially a vote by millions of investors on future cash flows of companies, growing faster than average would indicate that, at least on this dimension, Trump is delivering on his promise to “make America great again.” (American companies, that is.) To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Trump vs. Obama: Who Had Best 1st Year Stock Market Gains?
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According to a National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) working paper, older persons today appear more likely to enter retirement in debt than in past decades. Researchers examined older individuals’ debt patterns using the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) and the National Financial Capability Study (NFCS). With the HRS, they compared cohorts of people on the verge of retirement (ages 56 to 61) as well as people slightly older (ages 62 to 66). To read the full article in PlanAdviser, click: Debt Causing Financial Vulnerability for Pre-Retirees.
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Since 2007, the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 has required high-income Medicare enrollees to pay an Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount surcharge, or IRMAA, on their Medicare Part B premiums. This lifts the premium from covering just 25% of costs up to as high as 80% of results, and increased Part B premiums by as much as 219% in 2017 alone. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: The Value of Medicare Surtax Planning.
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FINRA will hold off on raising fees for its member firms despite “revenue challenges,” according to an unusual glimpse the regulator gave into its projected 2018 budget. Projected revenue of $822 million for 2018 is relatively flat when compared to 2013, the last year that FINRA raised fees, the regulator says in its newly released budgetary summary. FINRA derives about half of its total revenue from industry fees. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Rare FINRA Disclosure Predicts Budget Shortfall in 2018.
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As competition in the advisor tech space tightens, discount brokerages are expanding their platform’s offerings to appeal to a wider range of advisors. One of the more compelling new tools is automated portfolio management software that allows advisors to create recommendations digitally without the time and expense of consulting with an expert. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: A New Tool to Help Slash Portfolio Management Costs.
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Sexual harassment is not primarily about attraction—it is about power. Give more power to women, the reasoning goes, and sexual harassment gradually dies out. Unfortunately, this logic is not borne out in the real world. Just look at Fidelity. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Four Ways to Help Rid Wealth Management of Sexual Harassment.
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An Army veteran and former air traffic controller who recently was still piloting his own plane to work, Richard Salmen has become the CFP Board’s new chairman. With his choice, the board has returned a working financial planner to lead the nation’s largest and most powerful planning nonprofit. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: High-Flying Army Vet Becomes CFP Board Chairman.
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Client confidence has climbed and that rosier outlook for the economy and the stock market is propelling robust flows into equities and retirement accounts, advisors say. Allocations to stocks strengthened sharply, according to the latest Retirement Advisor Confidence Index—Financial Planning’s monthly survey of wealth managers—and helped to support further improvement in business conditions for the investment industry. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Rosier Client Confidence Drives Heavy Inflows into Stocks.
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Northwestern Mutual, the parent of No. 5 IBD Northwestern Mutual Investment Services, took a majority stake in consulting firm ClientWise, the two firms announced this week. The partnership will give Northwestern’s advisors access to coaching and digital tools while providing ClientWise with capital. To read the full article in FinancialPlanning, click: Citing “Societal Need” for Planning, Northwestern Mutual Makes M&A Play.
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Qualified charitable distributions can offer a tax-saving opportunity, and they may be more advantageous to consider under the new tax law. QCDs, which are available only for certain clients, count toward required minimum distributions and are excluded from income. To read the full article in InvestmentNews, click: Why Aren’t Clients Using QCDs? Help Them!