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Financial Advisor June 2004 Jeff Schlegel |
Special Needs Planning Requires Pioneering Spirit There isn't a lot of information out there to help financial professionals deal with the special needs of clients with disabled family members. |
BusinessWeek May 31, 2004 Toddi Gutner |
Disabled -- But Financially Secure Supplemental care trusts provide for an offspring without forfeiting public aid. A look at Merrill Lynch's Special Needs Financial Services group. |
Financial Advisor March 2011 Jerilyn Klein Bier |
Special Consideration Advisors help parents of special needs children tackle unique planning challenges. |
Financial Advisor August 2010 Lori K. Murphy |
Easing The Stress Here's how financial advisors and estate planners can work together to help those with mentally impaired family members. |
Financial Planning November 1, 2010 Jim Grote |
Special Cases Minoti Rajput, CFP, president and principal advisor of Secure Planning Strategies in Southfield, Mich., maintains a general financial planning practice and a specialized practice for families of children with disabilities. |
Financial Advisor December 2005 Jeff Schlegel |
A Special Vision Former financial advisor Mary Anne Ehlert formed an advocacy organization for the special needs community that, among other things, trains financial advisors to become advocates for and provide assistance to people in that community. |
Financial Advisor June 2012 Jeff Schlegel |
The Case For Special Needs Planning for the disabled can be a tricky -- yet rewarding -- practice area for advisors. |
Financial Planning September 1, 2011 Ed Slott |
Taking Special Care With Inherited IRAs Advisors can help families with special-needs beneficiaries preserve assets, and reduce unnecessary costs and losses. |
Financial Planning July 1, 2009 Martin Shenkman |
A Special Plan If your clients have special-needs children, it's time to revisit their planning assumptions. Will there be enough assets to provide for the special beneficiary? |
Financial Planning September 1, 2005 M. Michael Babikian |
A Delicate Balance For disabled clients, a special needs trust can maximize private sources of funding without jeopardizing public ones. |
Financial Planning December 1, 2010 Scott Schutte |
Blindsided I wouldn't be the first to suggest that people with disabilities or special needs require a greater degree of attention-at least when it comes to financial planning for them and their families. |
Financial Planning December 1, 2007 Barbara H. Cane |
Heirs With Special Needs Here's how you can help your financial advisory clients prepare for the future of disabled loved ones. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2005 Mark Feffer |
The Family Lock Box Retirement planning is all about identifying the client's desired retirement lifestyle, then translating that into savings and investment goals. But increasingly, family crises, and the emotions that go with them, are disrupting these well-laid plans. |
Investment Advisor December 2007 Kara P. Stapleton |
Care Givers Smart advisors are offering financial gerontology services to clients and their families, and are getting increased client satisfaction and referrals in return. |
Financial Advisor September 2007 Bruce W. Fraser |
Role Reversal What financial advisors can do to prepare their clients to care for elderly parents. |
Financial Advisor November 2005 Karen DeMasters |
When Grandparents Raise Grandchildren Some financial advisors have developed an expertise in helping families work through the financial issues involved when grandparents are raising grandchildren. |
Financial Advisor December 2004 Gregory Bresiger |
Your Next Client May be a Child Financial relationships that took an advisor years to build can be quickly ruined by a young person's recklessness with money. That's why it is often critical for advisors to know the children of their clients. |
Financial Advisor April 2005 Gregory Bresiger |
Selling A Home To A Child Convince a client nearing retirement to stay in a primary residence in a booming real estate market, delaying the move to the Sunbelt for a few years. Have the client sell the home to a child. It could help the client and a child under certain circumstances. |
Investment Advisor November 17, 2010 Marlene Y. Satter |
Special Needs, Special Designation If your clients have special needs children, you might want to consider this in the future |
Financial Advisor May 2005 Dorothy Hinchcliff |
A Special Dedication Provider Group is committed to helping parents with disabled children financially provide for their offspring. |
Registered Rep. August 24, 2011 Jerry Gleeson |
Fidelity: 529 plans not an advisor priority Assets in college-targeted 529 savings plans are growing at double-digit rates, but financial advisors appear to be on the sidelines when it comes to working with clients on the product. |
Financial Planning December 1, 2007 Elizabeth O'Brien |
Advisor Pulse Many parents are woefully underprepared to fund their children's college expenses, and advisors are well positioned to give them the nudge they need. |
Financial Advisor October 2011 Ben Mattlin |
Caretaker Challenges Clients who care for aging parents need more than financial and tax help from advisors. |
Financial Advisor November 2010 Ben Mattlin |
Compensating Caregivers Advisors discuss how families can provide at-home care for a loved one -- and defuse sibling rivalries that often result. |
Investment Advisor August 2007 Kara P. Stapleton |
Tassel Hassle A hot-button issue this time of year that brings clients to advisors is funding their child's college education. Here's what advisors can do to help. |
Registered Rep. July 1, 2004 Kevin McKinley |
The Future of College Savings An action plan for managing college savings from the year of a child's birth to the midteen years. |
Financial Advisor July 2006 Raymond Fazzi |
A Full-Fledged Specialty Education planning emerges as a new niche financial advisors as more clients need help with complex issues. |
Financial Planning April 1, 2005 Mitchell Rose |
Emotional Rescue By tending to family dynamics during the estate planning process, financial advisers can prevent wounds and conflicts years before they might occur. |
Financial Advisor October 2012 Michael J. McDermott |
Our House How can financial planners help those with three generations living at home? A multigenerational household certainly has financial complexities that need to be addressed. |
Financial Advisor June 2004 Dan Sullivan |
An Industry Transformer Mary Anne Ehlert has found a unique and rewarding way to set her business apart. The Ehlert Financial Group has developed "The Process for Protected Tomorrows" which offers financial solutions for people who have relatives with disabilities. |
Investment Advisor October 2006 Chris Blunt |
Advancing the Conversation Advisors' role in helping clients and heirs address end-of-life issues -- Behind the Numbers: 72% of parents said they would encourage their own financial advisor to discuss... etc. |
Investment Advisor May 2007 Kara P. Stapleton |
Compassion, Knowledge, and Personalized Service The primary risk factor for Alzheimer's disease is age, and with the majority of financial planners' clientele growing older, it's smart for financial advisors to become familiar with a different side of the financial planning business -- gerontology. |
U.S. Banker February 2007 Karen Krebsbach |
'Once Upon a Time, There Was a Very Rich Family...' Wealth managers can be instrumental in helping parents teach their children about the value of money-and managing for optimum portfolio longevity. The key? Starting early. |
Financial Planning September 1, 2007 Barbara H. Cane |
The Uncertainty Principle How do you advise your clients on estate planning when the rules are constantly changing? |
Financial Advisor January 2007 Marla Brill |
The College Savings Chasm The gap between college savings and costs is big, and it's likely to get bigger. Here is some advice on how financial planners can help. |
Financial Planning February 1, 2012 Martin Shenkman |
Trust, But Verify The estate planning answer for a lot of parents is to leave inheritances in trust for the benefit of their child. But trusts vary widely, and because this is a message many clients miss, planners must reinforce the idea. |
Investment Advisor August 2008 Lewis Schiff |
A Prospect With a Plan A prospect with an existing plan often presents opportunities. |
Financial Planning September 1, 2011 Suzanne McGee |
Full-Nest Syndrome Even when a financial advisor is able and willing to work with clients on containing and managing requests for financial help from their boomerang children, they can end up squarely in the middle of one of the most perilous kinds of disagreements: family squabbles over money. |
Registered Rep. September 9, 2015 David H. Lenok |
The Dangerous Allure of Incentive Trusts The allure of an incentive trust is understandable. Clients are excited about these trusts because they help assuage fears about their children not handling their inheritances responsibly. |
The Motley Fool August 16, 2006 Dan Caplinger |
Prioritizing Your Savings Should you save for retirement or for education for your kids? |
Financial Planning June 1, 2007 Jennifer M. DeLong |
The New College Try A college degree is invaluable, but it is worth more if it doesn't come with a debt load that burdens students and parents for years. College savings must take its rightful place as part of an integrated financial planning approach. |
Financial Advisor October 2010 Roy Diliberto |
Solutions Looking For Problems As financial life planners, we need to be watchdogs for inappropriate advice that others suggest to our clients. |
Financial Planning November 1, 2005 Maureen Mohyde |
The New Generation Gap Estate planning is one of the most important steps your clients can take to help their families. Planning can help make things easier for everyone when difficult times arise. But a study shows parents are more at ease discussing their estate plans than their boomer children. |
Registered Rep. March 28, 2012 Lena S. Rizkallah |
TRUSTS & ESTATES: April is National Financial Literacy Month Now more than ever, individuals should become familiar with the financial tools they need to create and follow a budget, manage debt and save for retirement. |
Financial Planning October 1, 2006 Suzanne McGee |
Rethinking Retirement Income Helping your financial planning clients to keep sitting pretty in retirement is more complex than ever. How will your practice adapt? |
Financial Planning November 1, 2007 Stacy Schultz |
5 Questions Chuck Toth, head of education planning at Merrill Lynch and secretary of the College Savings Foundation, discusses a new study on the state of college savings. |
Registered Rep. May 21, 2013 Alan Lavine |
Avoid Blowing Up a Veteran's Benefits Selling trusts and life insurance to war veterans can be tricky. One misstep could disqualify them from important benefits. |
The Motley Fool July 18, 2006 Dan Caplinger |
Get Your Kids to College: Custodial Accounts The custodial account works best in situations where relatively small amounts of money are involved, where the child is not certain about whether or not to obtain higher education, and where the child and parents are on the same wavelength about the responsible use of the money. |
BusinessWeek July 2, 2009 Lauren Young |
Caught Between the Elder Care and Education Money Pits Something's got to give when you're caring for aging parents while paying for your kids' pricey education - and it's often your retirement plans. |
Financial Planning August 1, 2010 Donald Jay Korn |
Borrowing Trouble When conversations about college affordability take place, planners may be able to introduce some realities into the discussion. |