Friday 1 March 2019

Weekend Reading for Financial Planners (Mar 2-3)

Enjoy the current installment of “weekend reading for financial planners” – this week’s edition kicks off with a fascinating study from Morningstar, which finds that even as financial advisors increasingly frame “behavior management” as a key value proposition, consumer research ranks “helping me control my emotions” as dead last amongst the benefits of working with a financial advisor, instead showing a preference for more tangible benefits like the advisor’s relevant skills and knowledge, how well the advisor communicates, performance results, and actually achieving financial goals.

Also in the news this week was a big announcement that Bank of America is dropping the Merrill Lynch name from its investment banking unit, consolidating the Merrill Lynch Private Banking and Investment Group (PBIG) into just Merrill Private Wealth (removing the “Lynch”), and retiring the 165-year-old U.S. Trust brand altogether… and raising the question of whether the days are numbered for the entire Merrill brand itself. And there’s a fascinating discussion from Bob Veres about whether FPA chapters should consider “seceding” from the FPA to form a new “CFP Society” that would fulfill the original founding vision of the FPA to be the home for CFP professionals (while the FPA itself has declined from nearly 50% to barely 20% market share of CFP certificants since 2000).

From there, we have several articles on spending and cash flow decisions, from research that suggests social media (and the rise of modern media in general) may be helping to drive the ongoing decline in the National Savings Rate in recent decades, the rise of “stealth wealth” behavior for those who don’t want to live ostentatiously (whether to avoid being solicited as a “wealthy” person, or simply to help find social circles that don’t encourage profligate spending), research on the habits of wealth accumulators that differ from everyone else, a fascinating series of interviews with people who had “sudden wealth” events about how they really handled the money, the ways our spending does (or often doesn’t) really align with our values (as an alternative way to determine whether we’re “living within our means”), and why perhaps society needs to become more cognizant of – and more sympathetic towards – the fact that even households living within their means and exercising financial discipline are often still exposed to significant “financial fragility” as well.

We wrap up with three interesting articles, all around the theme of finding and building our own career path: the first explores the research of what it really means to “find your passion” or calling, and how it turns out that you’re more likely to find a passion by simply engaging in something that’s aligned with your values and having your passion for it build as you succeed (rather than trying to identify the passion and find the ‘perfect’ passion job in the first place); the second provides a powerful reminder that almost by definition, you can’t learn from experience until you’re willing to do and experience something different than what you already do (which is why experimentation is so crucial); and the last is a fascinating reminder that while most people try to be good workers in their jobs, and find a good company to work for, that ultimately it’s finding the right industry that may actually be most important to long-term career success, as even the best companies and workers may struggle in an industry that is shrinking, while a rising/growing industry tends to lift all boats (while providing an outsized reward to the top performers in particular).

Enjoy the “light” reading!

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source https://www.kitces.com/blog/weekend-reading-for-financial-planners-mar-2-3-2/

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