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Policy and Regulatory Commentary
U.S. debt ceiling: Bills borrowing and brinkmanship
Quick takes on capital markets
Client Experience
Market Volatility and Recessions 101
This piece is approved to use with clients.
While you can't control market volatility, there are actions you can take to potentially minimize its impact on your retirement savings. Having a plan in place for a recession or market downturn may help give you confidence to weather the storm and keep working toward your long-term retirement goals.
Behavioral Finance
The Unconscious Nudge: Behavioral science and its financial implications
Over the course of this presentation, we will talk about how the brain systems work and how it impacts decisions that people make.
Client Experience
Creative Planning for Taxes and Distributions
Increase your expertise in tax and distribution planning. Manage multiple sources of income for optimal tax outcome. Take another look at Roth conversions, QCDs, and 529 plans. Consult with CPAs and other tax professionals.
Client Experience
Advisor sponsored events in a post-pandemic world
This piece is approved to use with clients.
Before last year’s COVID-19 pandemic, we would hear about advisors getting together with some clients and prospects for arts or charity projects, or even hosting a wine tasting. But unfortunately...
Policy and Regulatory Commentary
Patience required: How the close vote count may (or may not) impact markets and investors
Key takeaways for investors amid the tightening race for the White House and control of the Senate.
Policy and Regulatory Commentary
COVID-19 isn’t going away
This piece is approved to use with clients.
Colossal policy responses in the second quarter reassured investors that the U.S. economy can weather the COVID-19 downturn, with a relatively quick return to risk assets pushing the S&P 500® up 20.5% for the period, its best quarter since 1998. After bottoming in March, U.S. stocks rose as much as 44% before the rally stalled a bit over the last few weeks of the quarter. We saw a few signs of hesitation for more policy among lawmakers as indicators improved, but overall both Congress and the Federal Reserve (Fed) remain prepared to do more.