Enjoy the current installment of "Weekend Reading For Financial Planners" – this week's edition kicks off with a big expose from the Wall Street Journal on the SEC's new Form CRS, which found that amongst 8,100 firms that had filed Form CRS, 3,100 of them had a legal or disciplinary history they were required to disclose... and 40% of them failed to do so, raising serious concerns about whether the "transparency and disclosure" lynchpin of the SEC's new Regulation Best Interest rules is already coming up short.
Also in the news this week is an announcement that the state of Massachusetts will begin to enforce its own state fiduciary rule on both investment advisers and broker-dealers (in response to its view that the SEC's Regulation Best Interest came up short in regulating brokers giving advice), criticism of the Department of Labor's new fiduciary rule from both fiduciary advocates who say it doesn't go far enough and industry participants who fear it will already impose 'too much' fiduciary obligation on brokerage firms and insurance companies, and news that the SEC is finalizing changes to its Advertising and Anti-Testimonial rules with updates due to be announced next month!
From there, we have several interesting investment articles on retirement planning, including a look at how to reframe retirement as an 8,000 day period that clients can plan around (recognizing that 'play golf' may be a good start to retirement, but probably is not something you want to do for 8,000 straight days!), new research from Morningstar's David Blanchett about how to set a reasonable life expectancy estimate for retirees, a discussion of how to craft a 'Retirement Policy Statement' to complement a client's Investment Policy statement, an exploration of how retirement is really more a 'state of mind' than a state of being, and a look at the origins of FIRE as a movement around Financial Independence and not just 'extreme Early Retirement'.
We wrap up with three interesting articles, all around the theme of the new Work-From-Home era: the first explores how firms are testing out new 'hub-and-spoke' models of work environments with limited central office space and decentralized home office work environments; the second looks at the new rise of 'tiny office' spaces (e.g., 'tiny homes' custom-built as an office space!); and the last looks at how work from home may be challenging for many jobs and types of workers but especially conducive to knowledge-based workers (including financial advisors!?)!
Enjoy the 'light' reading!