Written by Gary Silverman, CFP®
I’m writing this on the weekend after the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union. That vote ended a 43-year long
By Gary Silverman, CFP®
Last week, I discussed how the Department of Labor (DOL) ruled that investment firms need to operate under a Fiduciary standard, “sort
By Gary Silverman, CFP®
As I had discussed a while back, the Department of Labor (DOL) was working on rules to require financial professionals to provide their
By Gary Silverman, CFP®
As we recently discussed, college is getting more expensive and graduates are thus being saddled with ever-increasing debt. Long before
By DaNella Organ
The cost of a college degree has been on the rise in the last few decades. The average annual growth of college tuition has more than doubled
By Gary Silverman, CFP®
Goals are good things to have. Big goals, the goals that will stretch us, are often recommended in order to really make a difference in
By Gary Silverman, CFP®
One part of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s annual report is titled: Soaring Numbers of Elderly Reshaping U.S. Economy. Today we
By Tina Haapala
(Note: I was busy again this week, so I asked Tina Haapala to continue the Digital Estate Planning discussion she began last week. As you’ll
Written by Tina Haapala
(Note: I was happily busy, but needed an article this week, so I asked Tina Haapala, the person in my office who usually edits this
Written by Gary Silverman, CFP®
Back when the Social Security system was first set up, the average age a person lived to was about equal to when benefits
by Gary Silverman, CFP®
This is the fourth in a series looking at a sad 15 years of investing.
We’ve been looking at how, over the last 15 years, average
Written by Gary Silverman, CFP®
Today we continue looking at a sad 15 years of investing. Recap: From 2000 through the end of 2015, the stock market has