Entries from September 2011
What's the Worst That Could Happen?
If the Eurozone breaks up, would that be the end of the world?
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Lessons from the Pub
What can our profession learn from other disciplines about managing a practice?
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Reverse-Style-Analysis Optimized Portfolios
Here's an investment process that rethinks every step of building a client portfolio.
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This Time It IS Different
With the U.S. debt downgrade and the sovereign debt crisis in Europe, is there a risk-free rate of return left anywhere in the markets? What does that mean for pension funds and anybody whose process relies on CAPM and the efficient frontier?
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A Question of Coverage
Is it time to take a second look at long-term care insurance?
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MEDIA REVIEWS - September 8-15, 2011
The blockbuster article in this issue is the reanalysis of the small cap premium--one of the two exceptions to CAPM that Gene Fama and Ken French reported in their seminal article. This article suggests that on a risk-adjusted basis, small caps have actually trailed large caps over virtually all longer time periods, including those studied by Fama and French.
The conclusions will be reported in a peer-reviewed journal, and meanwhile debated endlessly across the profession. Read the article now and you'll have a head start on the debate.
Meanwhile, you can always get something important out of Mitch Anthony's column, including a reminder here that work may be necessary for emotional, social and intellectual stimulation; that quality of life in retirement may require people to stay involved and active in some form of workplace. Joel Bruckenstein evaluates a new way to buy the Microsoft Office suite, and there's a nice writeup of all the actively-managed ETFs on the market. [Read more »]
The conclusions will be reported in a peer-reviewed journal, and meanwhile debated endlessly across the profession. Read the article now and you'll have a head start on the debate.
Meanwhile, you can always get something important out of Mitch Anthony's column, including a reminder here that work may be necessary for emotional, social and intellectual stimulation; that quality of life in retirement may require people to stay involved and active in some form of workplace. Joel Bruckenstein evaluates a new way to buy the Microsoft Office suite, and there's a nice writeup of all the actively-managed ETFs on the market. [Read more »]
The Man Who Owns Financial Planning
David Loeper and his companies have been granted two patents on some processes which might look an awful lot like what you do as a matter of professional routine.
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MEDIA REVIEWS - September 1-7, 2011
There were an unusually high number of high-relevancy articles in this issue of Financial Planning magazine, which will be distributed on the floor of the FPA Convention in San Diego. I liked Eleanor Blayney's suggestion at the end of the publication, that we assign a financial planner to take the Congressional leaders on the deficit reduction debate through the six-step planning process and talk about the long-term perspective. There are profiles of Roger Gibson and Julie Littlechild, and a good article from Brad Klontz on why clients sometimes fail to act on your best advice.
And the article on LTC insurance, including some planning tips on how to evaluate whether the investment is worth the cost, is excellent, particularly for advisors who are uncertain how to plan for long-term care issues. [Read more »]
And the article on LTC insurance, including some planning tips on how to evaluate whether the investment is worth the cost, is excellent, particularly for advisors who are uncertain how to plan for long-term care issues. [Read more »]
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