Enjoy the current installment of "weekend reading for financial planners" - this week's edition kicks off with some regulatory announcements, including ongoing efforts by FINRA to implement its "CARDS" analytical tool that would monitor investment activity in clients' accounts across the entire industry looking for inappropriate broker trades and recommendations, and a discussion of the potential paths the SEC may soon take to update the "accredited investor" definitions for the first time since 1982 (and raising the question of whether income and net worth are even appropriate measures to determine an accredited investor in the first place).
From there, we have a few practice management articles this week, including a prediction that the rise of the "mega-advisor" firm may soon present challenges for small independent advisors trying to compete, coverage of the recent buzz at the Deals and Dealmakers Summit that the amount of M&A activity in the industry may be 20X as much as widely reported, and a good discussion of what it really means for an advisory firm to have a true CEO (not just a founder who puts the title on their business card).
We also have a few more technical articles this week, from a New York regulator looking into whether Equity-Indexed Universal Life policies are being illustrated with unrealistically optimistic projections that aren't likely to come to fruition, to a good discussion of the events leading up to the departure of Bill Gross as advisors and clients across the country consider whether it's time to fire PIMCO from their portfolios, to an interesting discussion of the impact of time diversification and how it can legitimately lead clients to owning more equity exposure for the long run, and discussion of an emerging trend in long-term care insurance where carriers are increasingly asking about family history looking for clues about any potentially-genetically-inherited disease factors that would/should impact underwriting.
We wrap up with three interesting articles: the first looks at how to become a "super connector" as a means to build your network and advance your business/career; the second is a look at the "reverse mentoring" program being implemented with the executive committee at Pershing (and the benefits that come from getting a young, fresh perspective); and the last looks at how advisors interact with and communicate with clients, raising the challenging question of whether sometimes the biggest problem is not that clients won't act on advice, but that advisors need to learn better communication skills in how to deliver it in the first place.
And be certain to check out Bill Winterberg's "Bits & Bytes" video on the latest in advisor tech news at the end, including announcement of a high-profile (human) advisor firm that's launching its own online "robo-advisor" solution, to a discussion of the upcoming release of a big new version of Redtail CRM, and more! Enjoy the reading!