Author: Anu Heda

Best Blogs of the Week

While the industry’s blogs continue to load up on fiscal cliff, this week’s best includes only a single reference.

  • AllianceBernstein – Seth Masters directs this post directly to endowments and foundations. Selecting an institutional sub-segment is highly rare and this post is straightforward and effective.
  • BlackRock – This post shares important dates in December relative to the fiscal cliff.
  • Columbia – Via a very simple infographic, this post describes the difficulty in timing the market and why the end investor’s consideration might be more effectively categorized via risk. It’s a solid post for any FA to share with a client when asked the question (and it’s asked often): should we get back into equities now?

 

Best Blogs of the Week

The topic du jour (and probably everyday until it’s fixed) is the fiscal cliff. This week’s posts include two on the popular topic.

  • Franklin Templeton – This post gets to the heart of the matter: fixing the debt. It’s an instructive and quick read, immediately useful for FAs in their client conversations and prospect meetings.
  • Russell – A great combo-pie charts in this post. The post discusses potential 2013 government spending/revenue changes with some basic background information.

 

Best Blogs of the Week

With the election complete, content can focus on more varied topics than who will be President and what that means for advisors. We have our first 2013 prognostication and other posts.

  • BlackRock -Thinking about asset allocation in 2013? This post gives two scenarios to consider.
  • Oppenheimer – The first post-election post was also the most interesting and specific.

Best Blogs of the Week

Congratulations! You made it to the end of the political season.

Three posts this week, two regarding the fiscal cliff.

  1.  BlackRock – Nice infographic on the fiscal cliff (ending with a product sell).
  2. Pioneer – This is the single best fiscal cliff blog post. Nothing to say except: READ.
  3. Russell – Fantastic idea – look at World Series results to predict the S&P.