Friday 3 February 2017

Weekend Reading for Financial Planners (Feb 4-5)

Enjoy the current installment of “weekend reading for financial planners” – this week’s edition kicks off with the big news that President Trump has just issued an Executive Order to the incoming (but not yet confirmed) Secretary of Labor to apply a 180-delay to the DoL fiduciary rule, with guidance to “consider whether to rescind” it… though it still remains unclear whether the rule can actually be stopped without taking effect for at least some period of time, given the requirements for Notice and Comment periods before a new-new rule could be issued. Also in the news this week was the announcement that the original robo-advisor Betterment is raising fees substantially (by 67%) on its larger accounts over $100,000, and rolling out a series of human advisor service models (at even higher price points), as the robo-advisor definitively pivots away from its “pure” robo roots; and an announcement from TD Ameritrade that its new Veo One platform is live, along with a new iRebal Model Marketplace that could substantially shake up the landscape of current “robo” and TAMP providers.

From there, we have a few technical planning articles, including a new retirement study from Wade Pfau comparing the equity risk premium to annuity risk pooling as a means to fund retirement, another new retirement study from the UK finding that the “U-shaped” retirement spending path (where retirees spend more on active lifestyle in their early years, and more on medical/long-term care expenses in their later years) isn’t substantiated by the actual data on retirees (which shows that real retirement spending just flat-out declines every year throughout retirement), and a look at a new approach to helping parents plan for college expenses by determining an amount that the child is “pre-approved” to spend on college before even beginning the process (which avoids awkward situations where the family tries to figure out how to afford an unaffordable college after already being accepted, when it’s hard to back out).

There are also a couple of practice management articles this week, from a look at why just delivering great service isn’t enough to get client referrals and good client satisfaction (and why your “great” service has to be articulated in a client service standard), to a discussion of all the ways that advisors lose out on prospects before ever having a chance to meet with them, and an exploration of the different ways advisory firms are beginning to shift towards a younger generation of clientele (from forming full-family teams, to cultivating “intrapreneurs” that create a firm-within-a-firm to serve younger clientele).

We wrap up with three interesting articles: the first is a fascinating look at what exactly causes us to procrastinate, and what the behavioral research says are the best techniques to overcome it; the second provides tips on how to be (and remain) productive in what is often an unproductive work/office environment; and the last is a great reminder of how the path of success can actually be the very thing that causes us to lose focus on what made us successful, and how to take a pause and re-set what your focus should be (and what you want it to be), both in your work and in your life.

Enjoy the “light” reading!

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source https://www.kitces.com/blog/weekend-reading-for-financial-planners-feb-4-5-2/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=weekend-reading-for-financial-planners-feb-4-5-2

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