Is our retirement system broken?

Professor Teresa Ghilarducci has an opinion piece in the NY Times this week lambasting our evolving approach to retirement.  She has some good points. Our Ridiculous Approach to Retirement By TERESA GHILARDUCCI Published: July 21, 2012

Beware of Fancy Financial Advisor Titles

Tara Siegel Bernard writes in the NY Times, “Most investors don’t realize that when they walk into a bank or brokerage firm branch, the representatives there are essentially free to emblazon their business cards with whatever titles they please — financial consultants, advisers, wealth managers, to name a few. But if you’re looking for someone […]

Global Equity Valuations

The global equity markets continue to experience disappointing returns.  In discussions with clients, my advice is a reminder that the research shows that developing a strategic asset allocation plan and staying the course through rebalancing is the prudent course of action. The European sovereign debt crisis is in its third year and continues to create […]

Investor Behavior: Market Timing Pitfalls

Dalbar, an independent communications and research firm, has done countless studies trying to quantify the impact of investor behavior on real-life returns.  Their studies focus on the difference between investors’ actual returns in stock funds to the average return of the funds themselves.  Basically, they are comparing the return the investor gets to the return […]

Four Ways the Financial Media Causes Investors Harm

ONE:  Focus on the near term.  A recent headline reads, Anxious financial advisers scale back summer vacations.  “Still haunted by the 2008 financial crisis, many financial advisers are scaling back their summer vacations or giving up on them entirely.  Many are afraid to be out of the office in case this is the third straight […]

Market Commentary July 2012

Equity markets had a rough second quarter.  For the period ending June 30, 2012 the S&P 500 index (large stocks) was down 2.8%, the Russell 2000 index (small stocks) was down 3.5%, and the MSCI EAFE index (international stocks) was down 6.9%.  The international index might have seen a double-digit decline were it not for […]

Financial Planning Etiquette: Clients First!

“The interests of the client continue to be sidelined in the way the firm operates and thinks about money.”  This is a direct quotation from Greg Smith’s recent op-ed that he penned after stepping down as a senior executive of Goldman Sachs.  Holding himself up as a man of integrity, Mr. Smith couldn’t stand working […]

What About Bonds?

Bonds will be a terrible investment over the next 10 years.  That is the conventional wisdom in the investment community lately. “Bonds are the worst asset class for investors,” says Professor Burton Malkiel, the author of A Random Walk Down Wall Street, in an opinion piece published in late March in The Wall Street Journal.  […]

Market Commentary April 2012

Equity markets got off to an outstanding start in 2012.  Returns for the first three months represented the best yearly start since 1998, as the S&P 500 was up 12.6%.  As you can see in the chart, equity markets were generally up 11%-13% with emerging markets up 14%.  The broad bond market essentially broke even […]

The 2012 Income Tax Season Observations

I haven’t come across many new issues this tax season, but, as usual, a few surprises have popped up. Make Work Pay Credit Gone Many are disappointed with the amount of refund or amount owed compared to last year, primarily due to the elimination of the Make Work Pay credit that could be as great […]