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Is Gen X ready to retire? Depends who you ask

From CNBC
Added on February 2014 in Plan for the Future
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Summary: Get your happy on. Generation X may be more prepared for retirement than you've been hearing.Then again, maybe not. Late in 2013, Wells Fargo released its annual Middle Class Retirement Study. Included in the findings was the news that "middle-class Americans in their 30s seem to have the most realistic overall outlook for retirement."

 

Gen X needs advisers to help them ride the coming wave

From InvestmentNews
Added on February 2014 in Plan for the Future
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Summary: Generation X is like a surfer poised to catch a giant wave of income and inheritance. But they're hanging 10 without any professional help — and that's where advisers have an opportunity to leap aboard and keep them from wiping out.

Advisors Struggle With Internal Succession

From Financial Planning
Added on February 2014 in Plan for the Future
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Summary: While many financial advisors would prefer to have someone within their practice take over upon retirement, not enough are prepared for the internal succession planning process, Kelli Cruz, the founder of Cruz Consulting Group told advisors here during a presentation on Monday at IMCA's Consultants Conference.

Untangling Ownership: Succession Strategies for Firm Partners

From Think Advisor
Added on February 2014 in Plan for the Future
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Summary: To prepare a valuable succession plan that will take their firm into the future, advisors have to begin at the beginning and build a business instead of a practice, according to Charles Farrell and Fred Taylor of Northstar Investment Advisors. Regardless of an advisor’s exit strategy, it won’t work if he can’t detach himself from the firm.

Lack Of Succession Plans Is 'Scary'

From Financial Advisor Magazine
Added on February 2014 in Plan for the Future
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Summary: The lack of planning is particularly important because advisors over age 60 control $2.3 trillion in assets. According to recent research by Cerulli Associates, a financial industry research firm, nearly one third of advisors in the United States will exit the business in the next decade. The average age of advisors is now 50.9 years and 43 percent are over 55 years of age.

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