Enjoy the current installment of "weekend reading for financial planners" - this week's edition kicks off with the announcement of the widely anticipated series of lawsuits against the Department of Labor's fiduciary rule, with filings this week from both SIFMA and FSI (representing Wall Street and broker-dealer firms), as well as NAFA (representing the fixed annuity industry). However, legal experts are already suggesting that the industry's lawsuits appear weak, especially given how much the Department of Labor already conceded to the industry in its final rule compared to the previously proposed one. Also in the news this week was the revelation that advisor tech guru Bill Winterberg is embroiled in a lawsuit with fellow tech consultant Joel Bruckenstein over the profits of the recent T3 Enterprise conference (and tech vendors are taking note of the conference's substantial $458,000 reported profit).
From there, we have several practice management articles this week, including a look at the new overtime rule for employees in professional positions that may impact a number of advisory firms and the compensation they pay their paraplanners and associate planners, a look at why a niche based on personality type may be more appealing than a profession-based niche, how not billing on a client's cash balance could actually be a DoL fiduciary violation for advisors who manage portfolios with discretion, and a discussion of the "dark side" of becoming an independent advisor where the challenges of entrepreneurship can lead to depression.
We also have a few more technical articles this week, from a review by Bill Bengen of how the 4.5% safe withdrawal rate is holding up given the 2000 and 2008 bear markets (the short answer: it's doing just fine!), to a look at what advisors should discuss with clients about Medicare as they approach age 65, and a review from Social Security's Chief Actuary about the current state of the system, how much in benefits really will still be paid even if the trust fund goes "broke", and how the system will likely be fixed from here (without raising the Federal deficit).
We wrap up with three interesting articles: the first is a look at recent consumer surveys finding that investors are less interested in being do-it-yourselfers and are becoming more interested in at least working collaboratively with an advisor to 'validate' their advice, but why advisors should be wary about taking on such clients; the second looks at how technology can be so effective at solving our problems, but its design can also be manipulated (intentionally or accidentally) in manners that make us addicted to the technology in very unproductive ways; and the last covers the financial advisory industry's landscape for young advisors, where there are still not enough coming in to replace all the baby boomer advisors who are retiring, but a shift appears to be underway as firms establish better training programs and a more constructive team approach to supporting new advisors, and both membership associations and independent advisor networks increasingly step up to fill the void as well.
Enjoy the "light" reading!