Wealth Management

Only about 6% of advisors planning to retire within the next ten years have a fully documented succession plan in place. While most firstgeneration (G1) advisors express confidence about their transition, many feel reluctant to relinquish control, with 58% admitting they struggle to hand over leadership functions.

 

 On the other hand, successors (G2 advisors) often report uncertainty about timelines and compensation, and roughly one in three say they would consider leaving if the succession path remains vague

 

To bridge the gap, the study identifies three pillars essential for successful transitions: transparency, training, and tangible, documented leadership plans. Equity incentives also matter: fewer than half of G1 advisors have transferred any ownership stake, which fuels G2 turnover risk when their compensation lacks clarity. 


Finsum: Ultimately, without structured alignment between retiring firm owners and their successors, firms face elevated risks of client attrition, fractured continuity, and erosion of enterprise value.

Global equity funds attracted $8.71 billion in net inflows, reversing the previous week’s $4.4 billion outflow, as risk appetite returned. Investor optimism was fueled by solid U.S. economic data, progress on trade deals with Japan and the EU, and upbeat early earnings reports, including record profits from TSMC and a forecast bump from PepsiCo. 

 

European equity funds led the charge with $8.79 billion in inflows, their best showing in 11 weeks, while U.S. equity outflows slowed significantly. Sector-wise, tech rebounded with $1.61 billion in inflows, while financials and industrials each brought in over $1 billion. 

 

Global bond funds continued their 14-week inflow streak, adding $17.94 billion, led by short-term, euro-denominated, and high-yield bond categories. Commodity funds saw a resurgence too, with gold and precious metals funds notching $1.9 billion in net inflows, their strongest showing in over a month.


Finsum: If optimism over trade deals and AI-driven earnings continues to build, we could be on the verge of a sustained equity rally that pulls even hesitant U.S. investors off the sidelines.

Google is committing $25 billion over the next two years to build out artificial intelligence infrastructure in the Mid-Atlantic and beyond, marking one of its largest regional investments to date. The announcement will be made at the Pennsylvania Energy & Innovation Summit, where Google will also unveil a $3 billion agreement to purchase hydroelectric power from Brookfield Asset Management. 

 

As part of that deal, Google will help modernize two Brookfield facilities to support its goal of running operations on 24/7 carbon-free energy. Alphabet’s chief investment officer Ruth Porat emphasized that the investments will expand clean energy access and help train Americans for careers in the AI-driven economy. 

 

President Trump and other key leaders will attend the summit at Carnegie Mellon University, underscoring the federal government’s alignment with AI infrastructure expansion. Meanwhile, AI firm CoreWeave is also expected to announce a $6 billion data center in Pennsylvania, highlighting growing private-sector momentum in the region’s tech transformation.


Finsum: There seems to be little doubt that AI infrastructure will dominate the alt space the next decade. 

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