Sequence risk is not the ogre of the aged

If you accept risk as part of life, your savings should last nearer to life's end.

Discussions of sequence or series risk regularly appear in the financial media and are increasingly appearing in the general press. In simple terms, fear of sequence risk drives investors to take equity and growth asset exposures out of their retirement portfolios.

A year after launching the ASX mFund has seen most of its traffic from advisers.

mFund buoyed by SMSF advisers

The Australian Securities Exchange's (ASX's) mFund offering has seen most of its traffic from advisers in its post-launch year, with the majority believed to be there to dilute their clients' allocation to cash and Australian stocks.

Social Media can no longer be ignored by the wealth management industry.

Wealth managers need social media brush-up

Wealth managers around the world are accepting the onset and uptake of social media is irreversible and that they need to do something about it. The banks are pretty advanced in running social media strategies but asset managers and the wealth industry are not.

It's easier to let someone else worry about your super, that way you can spend a Saturday at a Florence and the Machine ...

Collective model will shake up super's disengaged

Many of us are disengaged with our super. We need to stop thinking of this as a bad thing. Rather than trying to look more like self-managed super funds, industry funds should seriously consider Collective Defined Contribution schemes as the next big thing for those of us with more sense, or better things to do than managing our own super.

Who can actually afford to travel like this?

Rethink the 'no wealth no service' approach to low-value clients

Reforms to the Future of Financial Advice "opt-in" requirement and big shake-ups for the life insurance market that compromise remuneration practices, increase compliance requirements and escalate the cost of doing business are forcing financial advisers to second-guess the affordability of certain clients.

Risk advisers are outraged by the proposed commissions regime and many are expected to quit the industry.

Futures in doubt after commission changes

Risk advisers are expected to desert the industry en masse in the next three years, with the new commissions regime considered untenable for both independents and the next generation of planners.