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Human Capital
The Culture of Diversity – It’s a Better One According to Advisors
This piece is approved to use with clients.
Financial advising may have a diversity problem. In fact, with reportedly 81% of the financial advisors being white, advising may be one of the least diverse professions in the United States. It should be no surprise then that, according to the Knight Foundation research, only 1.3% of assets are managed by women or minority-owned firms as of 2019.
Human Capital
Diversity is Good Business for Advisory Firms
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U.S. demographics are changing and we are expected to be a minority/majority by 2045. Yet the majority of financial advisors are still overwhelmingly white, male and shrinking in numbers. FlexShares conducted a survey of investors and advisors to see if diversity was being pursued and how firms were building diverse teams.
Human Capital
The Inherent Value of Diversity
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The client of the future doesn’t look, or act, like the client of the past, or in many aspects, the client of today. As people of all identities -- race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientations, family status, and more -- overcome historical barriers to access economic opportunities, financial advisors aiming to stay competitive may want to find ways to help a broader range of clients build wealth.
Active/Passive Management
Four big trends driving ETF growth
Martin Small discusses the forces that could grow the ETF market to $12 trillion over the next 5 years.
Sustainable Investing
Introducing Carbon Beta: What pricing carbon means for investors
For the first time ever, BlackRock is enabling all portfolio managers to stress test their portfolios to future carbon price scenarios. Andre and Mike explain why.
Retirement
Helping Millennial Women Close the Retirement Savings Gap
This piece is approved to use with clients.
Recent data show that the retirement savings of millennial and baby boomer women continue to lag behind their male peers.
Human Capital
Millennials aren't interested/don't have money to invest: Moving beyond the stereotypes
Huge opportunities for growth are overlooked because too many firms believe the myth that millennials aren't interested in investing and don't have money. Bridge this gap with a multigenerational team of advisors.
Human Capital
Millennials are distracted by technology: Moving beyond the stereotypes
Technology is not truly a distraction to millennials, but rather the infrastructure for much of their lives. Use it to your firm's advantage.
Human Capital
Millennials are overly concerned with social responsibility: Moving beyond the stereotypes
Millennials are values oriented and want to be engaged with firms and people that understand and share their values. Harness this passion to grow your business and retain employees.