
Is it a good idea to invest when the market is at an all-time high?
Markets keep making headlines for hitting all-time highs. If you’re retired or nearing retirement, that can feel unsettling. You may wonder if now is the wrong time to invest or if you should pull back. But history tells a different story. Markets reaching records is not rare—it’s normal. The challenge isn’t timing the market; it’s building a plan that works through highs and lows.
5 Reasons to Hire a Financial & Tax Planner in Retirement
As a retiree or someone approaching retirement, you’re shifting from saving and building wealth to living off what you’ve accumulated. This stage is less about chasing returns and more about making sure your money lasts, your taxes are controlled, and your financial decisions align with the life you want. Mistakes at this point can be costly and hard to reverse. That’s where a financial and tax planner steps in.
Instead of trying to piece together advice from articles, friends, or headlines, you get a coordinated plan tailored to your situation. A planner helps you transition smoothly into retirement, protect your income, and make confident decisions about taxes, investments, healthcare, and your legacy.
Downstream Gifting: A Tax Strategy Most Families Overlook
Downstream gifting is a tax strategy that lets you transfer appreciated assets, like stocks or ETFs, to your children or other family members in lower tax brackets. By doing this, you can save thousands in long-term capital gains tax.
Most investors never consider it, but if applied correctly, downstream gifting can be a simple, legal, and effective way to keep more money in your family.
8 Planning Strategies to Protect and Grow Wealth
When your net worth grows, so do the complexities... More money, More Problems (as they say).
The strategies that worked when you were building wealth often fall short once you’ve accumulated it. Taxes take a bigger bite, risk exposure widens, and the stakes around estate and business decisions rise.
If you’re in the high-net-worth category, you don’t just need financial advice—you need coordinated tax, investment, and estate planning.
Missing even one opportunity can cost millions over time. The following eight points highlight where high-net-worth individuals need to pay attention right now.
Concentrated Stock Positions: How to Handle Them
It’s common to meet people—especially execs, early purchasers, and people who received an inheritance—with a huge chunk of their net worth in one stock or fund.
That stock may have created serious wealth, but it’s also one of the biggest risks to your long-term financial stability.
If you’re in this boat, here’s the key truth: concentration builds wealth, but diversification protects it.
Let’s walk through how to manage this kind of position without blowing up your tax bill.
How to Build a Sustainable Retirement Income Plan
Retirement isn’t just about stopping work. It’s about replacing a paycheck—with a plan. A sustainable retirement income plan helps you cover your expenses, handle taxes, and avoid running out of money.
At the end of the day, cash flow is the lifeblood of retirement.
Here’s how to build yours.
The Real Value of Partnering with a Great Advisor
Why good advice beats good investments—every time.
Most people think hiring a financial advisor is about getting better investment returns. It’s not. A great advisor helps you make better decisions across every area of your financial life—decisions that lower your taxes, reduce risk, protect your family, and move you toward the life you actually want.
The true value isn’t in picking the next big stock. It’s in helping you avoid mistakes, take action on the right things, and bring structure to a part of life that most people constantly push to the side.
Here’s how that plays out in real life.
Donor Advised Funds: A Unique Way to Give (and Save on Taxes)
Donor-advised funds (DAFs) are a super unique tool when it comes to financial planning. They are extremely helpful if you want to be charitable and tax-smart. A DAF lets you donate now, get a tax deduction today, and decide later where the money goes. It’s a useful tool for high-income years, asset sales, or when your charitable giving strategy needs more flexibility.
How the “Big Beautiful Bill” Reshapes Your Tax Plan
Congress passed the “One Big Beautiful Bill” last week. The law cements several expiring provisions from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), adds new deductions, and brings forward implications for estate planning and fiscal policy.
Essentially, the 80,000-page tax code has just become longer...
However, that is okay. I have reviewed the provisions in the bill and outlined the key changes you should be aware of.
Trust types and how they serve your financial plan
Setting up a trust gives you control over your assets—how, when, and to whom they’re distributed. Here’s a practical guide to the most common trust types and how they fit into your estate and tax strategy.
Q2 Financial Checklist: Are You Still on Track?
We're halfway through the year. It’s a smart time to review your financial plan and make course corrections. Markets shift, goals evolve, and tax law is set to change dramatically in 2026. Staying proactive now helps you avoid mistakes later.
Here’s a detailed checklist to keep your plan on track
The New Face of Financial Scams: AI, Deepfakes, and Deception
Financial scams are getting smarter. AI-generated voices. Fake investment apps. Phishing texts that look like real alerts from your bank. These aren't minor threats—they're sophisticated, fast-moving, and harder to spot.
In 2024, scam losses topped $1 trillion globally. And in most cases, the money's gone for good.
10 Money Myths That Could Be Costing You
Most people build their financial beliefs on things they’ve heard—online, from friends, or even from parents. The problem is, a lot of that advice is wrong.
Bad information leads to bad decisions.
In this issue, I’m breaking down 10 common money myths that keep people stuck. These are the ideas that sound smart on the surface but fall apart when you look closer.
Time to clean up the noise.
Risk Tolerance vs. Risk Capacity: Know the Difference
These two terms get used interchangeably, but they aren’t the same. Risk tolerance is emotional. Risk capacity is financial. If you confuse them—or ignore one—you can end up with an investment strategy that either keeps you up at night or runs out of money too early.
Our Process for Reviewing Your Tax Plan
A tax planning review isn't just a box to check. It's a key part of managing your financial life—especially if you're a business owner, high earner, or someone with complex income streams.
Here's how we approach it, combining financial planning expertise with digital marketing insights to keep you informed and in control.
Buy, Borrow, Die: How the Wealthy Build and Keep Wealth
Buy, Borrow, Die is a common wealth strategy used by ultra-wealthy families to grow assets, access cash, and avoid income and capital gains taxes—legally. It's less about tax loopholes and more about understanding how the tax code treats borrowing and inheritance.
Tax-Efficient Wealth Transfers to Children or Heirs
If you plan to leave money to your children or heirs, you need to think about taxes. Without a smart plan, a large part of your wealth could go to the government instead of your family.
Here’s what you need to know about tax-efficient wealth transfers...
Roth Conversions: When They Actually Make Sense
If you're sitting on a large pre-tax retirement account, you've probably heard of Roth conversions. The idea sounds appealing—pay taxes now to enjoy tax-free growth later. But the reality is more nuanced.
Roth conversions can be a smart move. But they’re not for everyone, and not at every time.
Capital Gains: What You Need to Know and How to Plan for Them
Capital gains affect your investment returns—and your tax bill. Whether you're an average investor or a high-income earner, understanding how gains are taxed and how to plan around them can save you money.
Here’s what you need to know, plus planning strategies to consider.
Guide to Optimize Retirement Plan Contributions
Most people set their contributions once and never revisit them. That’s fine if nothing changes—but income, taxes, and goals usually do.
Now’s a good time to check if your current setup still makes sense. You might be missing tax savings, leaving room in your plan, or putting money in the wrong account type.
If you want to make smarter moves with your retirement savings this year, let’s review it together.
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