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Client Life Events
Lessons in Behavioral Finance: Bequest Intentions and Expectations of Older Adults
Curated content for RIAs.
You’re invited to join Janus Henderson’s lead behavioral finance research and wealth strategies expert, Matt Sommer, Ph.D., CFA, CFP, as he helps financial professionals answer three key questions about wealth transfer and how the relationship between children and parents affects bequest intentions.
Client Relationships
[CE Credit] Changing Faces of Wealth
The “Great Wealth Transfer” is underway, with $68 trillion set to pass from older generations to their heirs. Those inheriting constitute a generation much more diverse than the previous, and their principles and priorities tend to differ from the givers.
Client Relationships
[CE Credit] Integrating Community to Grow Your Practice
Several tangible ideas you can implement to enhance your brand, connect with prospective clients, and deepen relationships with current clients through authentic community integration.
Client Relationships
Carl Richards: Defining Advice, Defending “the PLAN” , Imposter Syndrome and everything in between!
In this episode, the NYT’s “Sketch Guy “ shares his best advice for those providing advice, why our industry needs to stop selling certainty, how to reposition financial advice to your current and future clients and where creative thinking fits into an advisor’s workflow.
Behavioral Finance
Are Your Clients Experiencing FOMO?
FOMO is often discussed in relation to social media engagement, but it’s also commonly experienced by investors – particularly when stock markets are booming.
Behavioral Finance
Regular Contributions Drive Wealth
Many investors wait until they have “enough” money or for when it’s “a good time” to invest in the market. Making regular contributions regardless of these concerns is one of the most powerful ways to build wealth.
Behavioral Finance
Rules as Tools: Using Heuristics to Help Empower Financial Success
People often use simple mental shortcuts, also called heuristics, when they make everyday decisions. But can these rules of thumb improve financial well-being? We studied commonly used rules of thumb in four financial categories (saving, spending, investing, and debt management).