Word: fee
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...directions. About one-quarter to one-half of all clients seeking the help of financial planners these days are early retirees between the ages of 50 and 55, notes Michael Chasnoff, a Cincinnati, Ohio, financial planner and chairman of the National Association of Personal Financial Advisors (NAPFA), which represents fee-only planners. And of the 20 million or so self-employed people in the U.S., 41% are in the 45-to-64-year-old age group, says Bennie Thayer, president of the National Association for the Self-Employed...
...complexity of your portfolio, a basic financial plan will run between $500 and $3,000, according to NAPFA. If you want your assets managed on an ongoing basis, the financial planner will charge an additional 1% or so of the total assets. Many in the financial-planning industry consider fee-only planners, who do not receive commissions on investments they recommend, to be the most objective in their suggestions...
...council's student group support to date comes almost wholly in the form of grants. This semester slightly more than $100,000 will be awarded. For most students on the campus, this is the only valuable service the council provides. They consider their $20 term bill fee as a direct transfusion to their student group's account. While some people argue that the council's bureaucratic job in awarding grants could just as easily be done by University Hall, there are many other things that the council can and should be doing besides offering grants, to support student groups...
...past. We can and should have Springfest, but for it to be successful it will have to be radically different than it has been. Perhaps we can explore options that we have not actively pursued, like having a joint Springfest with area schools or charging a low entrance fee and using this extra income to secure a band that students will be willing to listen to. Regardless, we will fail if we do not consult our constituents throughout the process. Their good ideas have gone unheard for too long...
...invest in large companies, buy a low-fee index fund. But to invest in smaller stocks, it's worth paying more for an active fund manager. That's the upshot of a new study by Morningstar, which shows that for the five years ending Aug. 31, the S&P 500 index outperformed actively managed large-cap funds. Managed small-cap funds, however, almost always bested the Russell 2000 index...