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10 Lessons From the Field
Quick note Yes, you’ve heard some of these before. There’s a reason. The moves below either stop a small problem from becoming a five-figure mess, or they quietly set you up for the next decade. We’re showing how they play out in real life so this isn’t just a checklist. The 5 DOs 1) Build…
Continue ReadingDisability Insurance: The Overlooked Side of Long-Term Care
Last year, we looked at disability insurance in simple terms – do you really need it, what does it cover, and how much does it cost? (If you missed that issue, you can find it here: Is Disability Insurance Really Necessary?. This time, we’re taking it further. Because disability insurance isn’t just about replacing a…
Continue ReadingThe Cost of Care and Who Pays It
If the first shock of long-term care is realizing how common it is, the second is seeing the price tag. Care is expensive at every level, and most families are unprepared for how the system expects them to pay. Some of these numbers were mentioned in the last article, but they are worth repeating, because…
Continue ReadingHow to Tell Sound Advice from a Sales Pitch
The trouble with financial advice today isn’t just that there’s too much of it. It’s that it all looks the same when you scroll. A budgeting tip, a debt hack, a hot stock idea, a “proven” crypto strategy – they show up in the same feed, delivered with the same energy. Some are useful, some…
Continue ReadingWhen Fear Steals Your Retirement
We spend most of our working years hearing the same warning: don’t run out of money. It’s drilled into every retirement calculator, financial seminar, and industry slogan. And it’s valid – once you’re retired, there’s no paycheck to replace a big mistake. But for some people, that fear never shuts off. It follows them into…
Continue ReadingComplexity Creep and the Cost of Getting It Wrong
Financial planning has always involved trade-offs. But in the past, the decisions were simpler – or at least the ripple effects were easier to predict. Now, with more moving parts and more interaction between them, it’s easy for even well-intentioned choices to backfire. Here are a few examples of how complexity creeps in and creates…
Continue ReadingWhat’s Your Risk Type? Why Advisors Use Assessments and How to Do a Gut Check on Your Own
A risk assessment is a tool financial advisors use to figure out how much risk you’re actually comfortable taking with your investments – not just in theory, but in real life, when markets get rough. It usually takes the form of a structured questionnaire. The goal isn’t to label you as aggressive or conservative, it’s…
Continue ReadingIs Stability a Lie?
The more unpredictable the world feels, the more the financial industry leans on one word: stability. It’s everywhere – in retirement plan brochures, annuity ads, risk-managed portfolios, and target-date fund descriptions. Products promise protection, guarantees, and peace of mind. But beneath the surface, that promise starts to look less like stability and more like control…
Continue ReadingUnderstanding Alternatives: A Clear-Eyed Look at Non-Traditional Investments
The term “alternative investments” gets thrown around a lot – usually with a mix of mystery, buzzwords, and promises of big returns. For a long time, most people didn’t have to pay much attention. Access was either restricted to ultra-high-net-worth investors, or the investments were so risky that no one dared mention them to a…
Continue ReadingOptions for Homeowners Whose Retirement Plans Just Got Complicated
A lot of people in or near retirement are realizing that their home – once the linchpin of the plan – isn’t doing what they thought it would. They assumed they’d sell and downsize. Or relocate and live off the difference. Or stay put with minimal costs and stability. That plan made sense. It was…
Continue ReadingWhy You Need a Personal Advocate
Have you ever wondered what would happen if your life took a sudden turn for the worse – a car accident, emergency surgery….who would take care of your life while you were fighting for it? A personal advocate is an individual you trust to make decisions and take actions on your behalf when you’re incapable…
Continue ReadingKey Takeaways from This Year’s Midyear Financial Forecasts
Sometimes it is wise to take a look back ahead of a journey forward. We have been scrutinizing the midyear outlooks published by various financial institutions and respected strategists back in June. Our aim is to provide valuable context as we approach what could be a turbulent period. With a Presidential election right around the…
Continue ReadingThe Green Gold Rush: A Comprehensive Guide to ESG Investing in 2024
Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) investing has gained significant attention in recent years, but many investors remain confused about its meaning, effectiveness, and potential impact on returns. ESG investing is a strategy that considers environmental, social, and governance factors alongside traditional financial metrics when making investment decisions. Here’s a breakdown of what each component means:…
Continue ReadingInvestor Psychology: Navigating Market Volatility
Imagine the stock market takes a nosedive. Your retirement account value plummets, and anxiety sets in. Logic tells you to stay calm, but the urge to act becomes overwhelming. This scenario illustrates the power of investor psychology, which influences both individual consumers and professional money managers. The key is to recognize the behavior and take…
Continue ReadingWill I Run Out of Money?
Worrying about running out of money is at the top of the list of concerns for those planning for retirement or already there. Whether you’ve diligently saved a small fortune or you’re working with more modest means, the transition from saving to spending can feel almost terrifying. Of course, no one can answer this question…
Continue ReadingIs 60/40 Still a Thing?
The 60/40 portfolio (60% equities, 40% bonds) has been a staple of investment strategy for decades. But did we adopt this approach simply because it was the best we could do with the limited investment options available at the time? While this strategy has generally performed well, it’s worth questioning whether it’s truly foolproof, especially…
Continue ReadingSocial Security, Please Hold
Thank you for calling Social Security, Your Estimated Wait Time is… No matter what the situation is, sometimes when we have a problem, we just want to speak to someone. We don’t want to listen to a lengthy message only to click on some options and then be told we can’t be helped and ‘good…
Continue ReadingWhy does Retirement Feel Expensive?
Over the years, we’ve been exposed to countless presentations on how financial advisors model retirement plans for their clients. Despite the common disclaimers that each plan is unique and tailored to individual circumstances, we’ve noticed a striking consistency: most advisors still rely on the 4% Rule as their primary strategy. This observation persists across the…
Continue ReadingThe Ways and Means of What Will Become of Social Security
As headlines increasingly spotlight a potentially shaky future for Social Security, the irony becomes evident: is the safety net meant to safeguard our retirement facing an uncertain fate? Let’s take a look at how Social Security’s summer is going so far… Back in June, the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Social Security held a…
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Beyond Policies: Building a Real Long-Term Care Plan
Last week we looked directly at long-term care: what it really looks like, how much it costs, and the hidden burden on families. This week we’ve focused on how insurance connects to that reality – life insurance with its riders and cash value options, and disability insurance that protects income long before retirement. But here’s…
Continue ReadingThe Hidden Price of Family Caregiving
When most people think about long-term care, they imagine bills from nursing homes or assisted living facilities. But in the United States, the majority of care is not provided by professionals. It is provided by family. According to AARP, nearly 38 million Americans serve as unpaid caregivers for an adult relative each year. Collectively, they…
Continue ReadingWhy Quick Financial Fixes Feel Good – and Why Algorithms Keep Serving Them Up
If you’ve ever searched “how to get out of debt” or “best savings account,” you know what happens next. Your social media feed magically shifts. Suddenly the videos and ads look tailored to your situation: debt relief programs, credit repair offers, high-yield savings accounts, investing hacks. It feels like coincidence, but it isn’t. The algorithms…
Continue ReadingThe Risks Your Portfolio Can’t Cover
A retirement plan can tell you how to replace a paycheck, cover your bills, and keep your investments on track. What it can’t do is make sure someone shows up when you need help getting dressed, recovering from surgery, or making it to a doctor’s appointment when you can no longer drive. We like to…
Continue ReadingKeeping Up Without Jumping First
Finance isn’t fashion. You don’t get points for being the first to try the newest thing, and rushing into untested strategies can do real damage. But pretending the landscape isn’t changing is just as risky. The challenge for professionals and do-it-yourselfers alike is knowing when to move from “watch and learn” to “time to act.”…
Continue ReadingAnnuity Riders: What They Add, What They Cost, and Who They’re For
Annuity riders get pitched like optional upgrades – just add this feature and your contract does more. More income, more growth, more protection. But what they really do is add complexity and cost, and often shift the conversation from “What does this contract do?” to “What might this contract eventually do under specific conditions?” That’s…
Continue ReadingMind the Healthcare Gap: Tools for Planning, Catching Up, or Hanging On
Healthcare in the U.S. is expensive, often unpredictable, and full of blind spots – even when you technically have coverage. For some, the challenge is figuring out how to prepare for the what-ifs. For others, it’s about staying afloat when you’re already facing bills and stress you didn’t plan for. Let’s walk through a few…
Continue ReadingPre-IPO Scams: What Looks Exclusive Is Often Just Fraud
Pre-IPO investing has become a popular marketing pitch – especially over the last year. The idea is simple: get access to a company before it goes public. The SEC has issued repeated warnings about so-called “pre-IPO” opportunities being offered to individual investors. They’re still seeing complaints. And they’re still taking enforcement actions. These are not…
Continue ReadingRethinking the Role of Housing in Retirement Planning
Many people think of their home as their biggest asset. It’s where a lot of their money has gone over the years, and in many cases, it’s appreciated in value. But it’s also different from other assets because you live in it. It’s one of the few things you can own that carries financial, emotional,…
Continue ReadingA Midyear Personal Assessment
How to Stay Financially Grounded When the Economy Won’t Sit Still We just spent time walking through what Wall Street sees ahead: slower growth, persistent inflation, market volatility, and no clear consensus on what comes next. But here’s the truth that rarely gets said out loud: It doesn’t take a market crash to throw off…
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