“How are we going to deal with aging clients as they accumulate? When they're in early retirement and spending and then all of a sudden when they're hitting their 70s and 80s and they experience cognitive issues, health problems and other serious events that advisers are going to have to help their clients with — and they are not ready to do this.”
“Extraordinary fiscal revenue approaches, taxation, etc. by the new House of Representatives impacting perception of the capital markets by institutional investors and in turn retail investors … causing short-term volatility that quickly reminds investors of 2008.”
“I think one of the areas that's maybe not getting as much attention as it should is the element of risk management. I believe as boomers move from accumulation to distribution, the topics and the elements of risk management strategies will become much more on the forefront of financial planning.”
“I don't think we can underestimate things like stem cell research that's occurring and other forces in health care that may exponentially change life spans for people. So to really alter the way we think about how much money does one need in retirement, you've got to watch the health-care space.”
“Machine learning is here, it's real. Imagine a financial adviser being able to look at every single potential outcome and situation a client has 365 days a year, 24 hours a day, and generate alpha actions, maybe none or maybe half a dozen. AI is going to change the way we add value and the way we interact with our clients in the future.”
“I think it's a simple message of communication between the adviser and the investor. Using visualizations and iconography or tools to convey complex portfolio context constructs or helps people figure out how they're going to reach their goal or how likely they are to reach their goal.”
“I think the disruptive force right now is a connected ecosystem, from identifying the goal to coming up with the investment solution to then executing the goal and having the ongoing balancing. The problem we see right now is all those things are fragmented or separate.”
“As baby boomers start to rely on this nest egg to get them through retirement, decumulation is going to become more and more important, and it will be a shift. I think the folks that have planned for decumulation are certainly going to win their shares of the business in the future.”
“The disrupter is household level management where risk and tax become critical. As we go forward, it will be about household level management that is both risk-smart and tax-smart.”
“The invasion of asset management and product companies into adviser technology. While many firms will build or buy their own technology initially, they eventually will follow custodians' lead to integrate their technology products/services with the most popular advisory technology tools that RIA firms are using today.”
“It's demography, it's aging. It's the exact same trap that almost every industry has fallen into when they don't think about the importance and the size of the baby-boomer generation.”
“The distraction of machine learning. I believe it can be an enormous help to the client, and to the adviser to serve clients better so they make better decisions. But at the end of the day, it's not going to replace the adviser.”
Relationships are key to our business but advisors are often slow to engage in specific activities designed to foster them.
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Survey findings from the Nationwide Retirement Institute offers pearls of planning wisdom from 60- to 65-year-olds, as well as insights into concerns.
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