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CONSIDER EVERYTHING

ICW Journal

Perspectives help cultivate ways of thinking about and understanding things and sightlines help develop clarity about what lies ahead.

These helpful primers, books and blogs can help you think about situations and problems in more wise and reasonable ways. They can help you develop longer-term perspectives and sightlines to withstand the shifting winds of short-term thinking. They can help you bypass  camouflaging distractions and help you stay focused on the key issues that matter most to the long-term success of your plan.

IT’S JUST PART OF WHAT WE DO.

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designed to maximize your life.

Focus on what’s important.

We help you develop and maintain perspectives and sightlines to your plan.

CONSIDER EVERYTHING

ICW Journal | Perspective and Sightlines

Perspectives help cultivate ways of thinking about and understanding things and sightlines help develop clarity about what lies ahead.

These helpful primers, books and blogs can help you think about situations and problems in more wise and reasonable ways. They can help you develop longer-term perspectives and sightlines to withstand the shifting winds of short-term thinking. They can help you bypass  camouflaging distractions and help you stay focused on the key issues that matter most to the long-term success of your plan.

It's just part of what we do.

We help you develop and maintain perspectives and sightlines to your plan.

ICW Papers | Perspective and Sightlines

Have you been measuring what matters most to your future financial success, or have you been focusing on the market’s day-to-day gyrations …

Much has been written about investment behavioral mistakes and whether financial advisors can help clients generate market-beating investment outperformance. Amid all of …

When building wealth for the long term, your goal should be long term investing ‒ time in the market versus timing the …

Quantifying a financial advisor’s value has become easier in recent years as financial services firms have undertaken and completed studies on the …

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Quantifying a Financial Advisor’s Value

Quantifying a financial advisor’s value has become easier in recent years as financial services firms have undertaken and completed studies on the matter.  Firms such as Vanguard, Morningstar, Dalbar and most recently Russell Investments, have added to the body of knowledge on this topic. The significant global changes of the past 24 months have prompted more than a few investors to consider seeking out a financial advisor to help them navigate the marked changes in the investing landscape. In doing so, investors are trying to determine the value they hope to receive in exchange for the advisor’s costs.  That can certainly be a challenge.  Now, thanks to the work of leading global investment manager Russell Investments, part of the answer is clearer to see for 2022. Studies Can Help Quantifying a Financial Advisor’s Value Russell has developed a formula to help determine the tangible benefits of working with a financial advisor.  The Russell formula identifies four separate financial advisory services and measures the value of each, noting that in 2022, investors might add an extra 4.91% of investment return.  The study quantifies how making better financial planning and investment decisions can lead to better investment results. Many investors believe that

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The Greatest Risk to Retirement Success?

Shortfall Risk is the Greatest Risk to Retirement Success The greatest risk to retirement success? For most of us, it’s shortfall risk ‒ the chance that our savings will expire before we do. Shortfall risk typically arises from one or both of these shortcomings: (1) not taking the time and doing the work to study how much we might need, or (2) the lack of a plan to accumulate enough, and the discipline or guidance to stick with it. So how do you measure how much money you may need to eliminate shortfall risk for you? By working through an asset/liability study. In simple terms, this means taking stock of what you have, and measuring it against what you may need. The difference between your assets and future liabilities will either be a surplus or a deficit. If you have a surplus, you will sleep well. On the other hand, if your projected assets fall short of your future liabilities, you’ve got work to do or look forward to restless nights. Either way, an asset/liability study will help inform you how to improve your opportunity for retirement success. Reducing the Greatest Risk to Retirement Success There is no shortage of

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Retirement Distribution Planning

Retirement Distribution Planning May Help Minimize Your Overall Tax Expenses If you’ve diligently saved and invested throughout your working years, congratulations! You’re on your way to funding a more comfortable retirement. But when you finally do stop working, you’ll face a new challenge: Making sure that your assets last as long as possible. One way to accomplish this is to withdraw money from your various investment and retirement accounts in a tax-efficient manner. Creating tax efficiency involves effectively structuring your withdrawals from your taxable accounts and distributions from your tax-deferred and tax-free accounts to help minimize your overall tax expenses. These calculations and the scenario analyses involved are commonly referred to as ‘retirement distribution planning.’ Retirement Distribution Planning Requires Coordination with Your Taxable Accounts Retirement distribution planning can require a fair bit of analysis of the tax treatment of withdrawals from your taxable investment accounts and distributions from your various types of retirement account in order to minimize and optimize your tax exposures. Taxable accounts − Dividends, interest and other investment income are generally taxable in the year earned, and capital gains are taxable when realized.  The tax rates specific to you on your dividends, interest and capital gains may

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The Magnificent 7 and Valuations

Financial markets have felt more fragile recently with investors concerned about the economy, the possibility that the Fed may be behind on cutting rates, and some disappointing tech earnings. Ironically, despite the market volatility last week, major indices were mostly unchanged from Monday to Friday. While they are down from their recent all-time highs,

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