As safe withdrawal rate research gains in popularity, it is both increasing used - and misused - by financial planners and the press. Although the research does have its limitations - which I discuss frequently in my presentations at various financial planning conferences throughout the year - and is built on many assumptions that deserve to be challenged, a rising number of safe withdrawal rate critics appear to criticize the approach based on inaccurate statements. So let's clear up a few points of confusion about safe withdrawal rate assumptions. Read More...
6 Ways A Planner Loses New Clients Before Ever Meeting Them!
There is a perception in the financial planning world that the process of acquiring a new client begins at the first meeting - the so-called "approach talk" - and therefore any firm that does a good job at converting prospects into new clients in those early meetings must have an effective business development process. Firms that want to grow more/better/faster are encouraged to refine their process, materials, and techniques used in the approach talk to improve the rate at which prospects convert into clients.
Yet the reality is that from the client's perspective, the process actually starts much earlier; and because the "pre-meeting" parts of the process are so ignored by most planners, the reality is that many (or even most!?) potential clients may be lost before you ever have a chance to meet them!Read More...
Should Fiduciary Planning Firms Have Minimum Capital Requirements To Protect Consumers?
Should fiduciary wealth management firms have minimum capital requirements, to ensure they can make good to clients if they do fail in their fiduciary duties? One of the professed strengths of the RIA model is the fact that such firms are held to a fiduciary standard, providing a higher level of legal accountability for firms that fail to put their clients' interests ahead of their own. But strictly speaking, that really only holds as a consumer protection if the firm has the financial wherewithal to actually pay damages, should they arise. Read More...
Are You Looking To Hire A "Mini-Me" For The Future Of Your Firm?
Has The Financial Planning Profession Bet Its Future On The Stock Market?
If there's one staple of financial planning wisdom that virtually everyone will agree upon, it's stocks for the long run. Sure, we all acknowledge that markets can be volatile in the short term, but we all seem to still agree that in the long run, stocks are still where it's at. So as long as you have a long enough time horizon - whether you're a young person still accumulating, or a retiree looking at a multi-decade spending phase - stocks are still a material portion of the portfolio. But within the past hundred years alone, there was nearly an entire generation - who grew up during the Great Depression - that gave up on stocks for their entire lives. What if that happened again? Has the financial planning profession hitched itself to the stocks-for-the-long-run wagon so tightly that if stocks fall off a cliff, so too will the profession?Read More...
Are We Being Too Forward With Our Clients?
In the dating world, being "too forward" generally means trying to advance a relationship at a pace that is too fast for comfort; being too confident and direct in what is said, to a point that may not be socially acceptable. The general remedy in the dating world, then, is to "take it slow" and allow the relationship to build trust before trying to advance a relationship to the next stage. Of course, building a trusting relationship is not unique to the dating world; many of the exact same dynamics apply in building the planner-client relationship. Yet in practice, because financial planning relationships must move to an implementation stage after “relatively” few meetings, planners often must be very forward during the sensitive relationship-building phase. But how far is too far? Have you been asking your clients to get naked on the first date?
Should Planners Have A More Active Role in Setting Reasonable Spending Policies For Clients?
Some financial planners consider budgeting and cash flow the cornerstone of a client's financial plan; for others, the focus is on long-term planning, and they let client cash flow sort itself out. In many situations, planners seem to be uncomfortable in giving spending guidance to clients; as the saying goes, "It's their money; who am I to tell them how to spend it?" Yet at the same time, most would probably agree that clients can't just save their way out of their fiscal woes; you only free up money to save by first determining what to NOT spend it on.
So does that mean in the end, planners can't have a broader impact until they are more active in helping clients actually set spending policies?Read More...
Why Is It ALWAYS Bad To Get Out Of The Markets In Times Of Risk?
The prevailing wisdom in financial planning is that clients should stay the course... always. It's "never" appropriate for clients to get out of stocks (even a little bit), and the eternal chiding to any so-called market timer is that even if you can figure out when to get out, you'll never figure out when to get back in again, and you'll miss any rally that might follow a market decline. But does this miss the point? If you actually sell BEFORE a severe market decline (as opposed to after), you don't even NEED to get back in until the market recovers anyway!Read More...
Why Financial Services MUST Figure Out How To Allow Social Media – And Fast
The explosion of social media as a means of communication has been stunning. And while those in professional services are just trying to keep up with the change, today's younger generation (and frankly, more "older" people that you might suspect) has already fully embraced the change. What this means, though, is that social media is not just about some new way to do marketing and develop new clients. Instead, it means that financial services needs to figure out how to handle social media - and fast - to even remain relevant and appealing to the future generation of financial planners themselves!Read More...
What Happens If You Outlive Your Safe Withdrawal Rate Time Horizon?
Although the research on safe withdrawal rates has been replicated many times by various researchers to substantiate a safe, sustainable spending level that can withstand at least anything that history has thrown at a retiree, one significant challenge has always lingered: a safe withdrawal rate recommendation is only as good as the time horizon it's associated with. In other words, while the research may support a 4.5% safe withdrawal rate, it's predicated on a 30-year time horizon. If the client planned to retire over a 35- or 40-year time horizon, the safe withdrawal rate would be different. Unfortunately, though, the client may not know that a 35-year time horizon is needed until it's year 31 and there are still a few years left to go! So what's the outlook for a safe withdrawal rate approach if the client outlives the original time horizon?Read More...