FINSUM
Lessons for Advisors From High Net-Worth Clients
In an article for SmartAsset, Wola Odeniran shared some lessons for advisors from working with high net-worth clients.
The first lesson is that nearly everyone needs an estate plan regardless of their financial status. Many instinctively think that such planning is only necessary for wealthier individuals and families. However, estate planning is the foundation for attaining financial security. It can also help advisors build trust and differentiate themselves from competitors.
The second lesson is that it is always helpful and valuable to get outside advice. Many high net-worth clients are very successful in their fields, yet they are willing to hire and defer to advisors. Advisors can use this as an example when explaining to potential clients about the benefits of working together.
The third lesson is that index funds can be a foundation for portfolios. Many high net-worth investors stick to indexing given the low costs and forced diversification. However, these are a good fit for any portfolio regardless of net worth, yet many clients fail to take advantage of index funds.
The final lesson is that money without financial planning does not lead to happiness. Many high net-worth clients see their wealth disappear due to a lack of planning, while those with fewer assets are able to live peacefully in retirement with little financial stress.
Finsum: Here are some lessons that financial advisors can learn from high net-worth clients to improve their practice and convert prospects into clients.
Why Annuities Have Value for Portfolios
In an article for Kiplinger, Martin Nuss discussed the benefits of owning annuities. First, it’s important to distinguish between the many types of annuities. For example, savings-oriented deferred annuities offer tax benefits and guaranteed principal. In contrast, income-based annuities function similar to private pensions and provide guaranteed retirement income.
A pressing concern for future retirees is that social security benefits are not going to be sufficient to meet most people’s retirement needs. And, this is before accounting for the aging population and shortfall between revenue and expenditures.
Annuities are a great solution, because it lets you save and grow money without worrying about taxes. While younger investors have risk tolerance and are willing to stomach the risk required to generate strong returns, older investors have to be more mindful of risk. Therefore, there is more demand for less volatile investments like annuities.
For investors with less risk tolerance, fixed-rate annuities are a good choice. They function like tax-deferred bank CDs, albeit with higher returns. Annuities aren’t federally insured but tend to be offered through reputable insurance companies. Fixed-indexed annuities are ideal for retirees who are looking for short-term cash flow, while they wait for their pension or social security payments to begin.
Finsum: Annuities can offer so much value to investors to help them reach their financial goals. Yet, it can be difficult given the variety of offerings.
Banking on volatility
With the waters of volatility in the banking sector taking five – or, perhaps, 10 – the market’s turning its sights to some incomplete biz: disinflation, according to swissre.com.
Due to “decisive government and central bank actions,” what might have ballooned into a systemic financial sector crises – on both sides of the Atlantic, at that -- which would have put a damper on merging markets, was sidestepped. But stemming from stubborn core inflation pressures and tight labor markets within advanced economies, in May, the Fed and European Central Bank’s expected to hike policy rates.
Meantime, call it a game of adjustments.
In the first quarter, Gateway, which is focused on low-volatility equity investments, made adjustments in its portfolio, according to barrons.com.
The low down: it wielded the scissors, shoring its stake Apple stock and putting the old slash on its General Electric investment. At the same time, it purchased Altria Group stock (MO). The stock trades – as well as others -- were disclosed by Gateway in a form it filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Third party strategists life of financial industry party
The financial industry’s not just casually tweaking its monthly expense reports and watching things unfold.
Nah uh. As it sachets toward holistic wealth management and “goal based” planning, the industry recognizes the importance of acquiescing asset management to third party strategists has mounted, according to wealthmanagement.com.
In two step with that escalating need is spiraling opportunities to accomplish that mission. While within the largest firms, already advisors can access model portfolios, now, their counterparts have more options.
And, hey, model portfolios tout more than a few advantages.
For example, there’s ease of use. “Model portfolios can be used as a complete solution for investors that prefer a hands-off approach to achieving their investing objectives,” said Colby McFadden, CEO of Quiver Financial, an Investment Advisory Firm in San Clemente California, according to forbes.com.
“Model portfolios can be used as a complete solution for investors that prefer a hands-off approach to achieving their investing objectives,” said McFadden.
Another: diversification. The need for a thick wad of money to pluck down on multiple asset classes? No need, noted Mark Kennedy, president of Kennedy Wealth Management in Calabasas, Calf. Some can have a minimum as low as $10,000 to start.”
ETFS reeling in the cash
Last month, investors must have spent more than a little time at their neighborhood ATM. After all, during that period, they poured $62.1 billion into ETFs, according to zacks.com.
That’s setting some pace, at that, considering it’s almost tripled February inflows, according to the BlackRock report. The first quarter net inflows as a result: $148.5 billion.
Fixed income ETFs fueled most of the inflows. Marking the largest gain since October, it hauled in approximately $38 billion.
Meantime, the Innovator, an outcome-based ETF issuer, recently was more than a little busy. It launched a unique suite of barrier ETFs that extends protection by scooping up U.S. Treasurys and selling equity options, according to cnbc.com.
“Advisors are realizing that bonds aren’t the safe haven that many thought they would be,” the firm’s CIO, Graham Day, told CNBC’s “ETF Edge.” “If you can pair [a barrier ETF] with the fixed income, it offers a tremendous amount of diversification benefits.”
And talk about two birds with one stone. These ETFs nip credit risk in the bud and yield liquidity every day, Day explained.