Morning Memo
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August 11, 2017

 

Today's Top Stories


Excessive Fees Lawsuit Against First Eagle Dropped


Baby Boomers Will Keep Rates “Lower for Longer”

David Ader

 


Income With Impact: A Guide to Green Bonds

Sponsored by VanEck

Learn how to make an environmental impact with your fixed income allocation.

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Affirmative Action for Wealthy Students

Lynn O'Shaughnessy

 


An Advisor’s Guide To Cross-Border Taxes

Steve Maggi, Jay Scheidlinger and Jonathan I. Shenkman

 


Four Digital Marketing Tools Advisors Should Embrace

David Partain

 


The Daily Brief

Multiple Pro Athletes Swindled Out of Millions

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced today that Louis Martin Blazer III, founder of Blazer Capital Management, has been ordered “to pay nearly $2 million in fines.  The former Pittsburgh financial adviser was accused of embezzling $2.35 million from investment accounts of pro athletes and other wealthy clients to invest in movies. When his ploy was discovered, Blazer III made “Ponzi-like payments” and lied to SEC examiners about taking money from five clients, at least two of which who were professional athletes, from 2010 and 2012. This is not Blazer’s first settlement or lawsuit; he settled a case in 2012 in which retired NFL running back Kevan Barlow sought compensatory damages upwards of $4 million and punitive damages of $12 million for “misappropriated, mismanaged, squandered, and/or stole[n] millions (of dollars)”; in 2014, New Jersey-based First Choice Bank sued Blazer for a number of unpaid loans taken out in 2011 by athletes, including former Pitt basketball standout DeJuan Blair, former Cleveland Browns wide receiver Greg Little, and former NFL running back Anthony Allen. Blazer has not been a registered financial adviser since 2012.

Are Index Funds to Blame For High  Airplane Ticket Prices Too?
Index funds can’t catch a break lately. Litanies of articles have come out warning investors about the dangers lurking in an overly indexed stock market. An article in August edition of The Atlantic magazine traces much of the controversy back to a 2014 academic paper that suggested index investing causes “monopolistic tendencies” because of its “common ownership” of companies. Companies that share a common owner are less motivated to innovate and compete against each other, the theory goes. The academics studied airline tickets and concluded they were 12 percent higher than they would have been, because the airlines are all “owned” by the same entities, i.e. index funds run by Blackrock, Fidelity, State Street, and many others. The magazine points out that in some circles “common ownership” is being blamed for high bank fees and excessive CEO pay. “One journal article argues that large index funds are violating antitrust law; another recommends a limit on index funds owning stock in more than one company in an industry. No one expects these ideas to lead to political action under the current presidential administration, but they are gaining traction among Democratic lawmakers,” the article states.

High Net Worth Travel Agents  
According to a recent report from Skift, a travel-industry publisher, one third of high-net-worth travelers uses a travel agent. Skift's 50-question survey targeted top-20 percent income earners in the United States, receiving 1,300 responses. The report, “2017 U.S. High-Income Traveler Survey,” found that 10 percent of HNW travelers exclusively utilize a travel agent when planning a trip, 26 percent use one almost always or often, 28 percentnever use an agent, and 36 percent seldom use one. Skift claims that more agents are focusing on luxury travel, referring to themselves as "travel designers," according to Travel Market Report.

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