We have recently received several calls from clients and radio show listeners who also have accumulated sizable credit card debt. Their questions are twofold: should they pay off the debt with other assets and, if so, where to withdraw the assets from to pay off that debt.
On August 27, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell dramatically changed monetary policy that had been in place since the 1970s. He did so in a speech at an economic symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The speech was entitled “Navigating the Decade Ahead: Implications for Monetary Policy.”
There’s an old saying in the investment community that the average investor spends more time researching what toaster to buy than what mutual fund to invest in.
Experience is very underrated by those who do not have any. The past few years have provided many lessons to those of us who have been in the financial services business a long time — and those still wet behind the ears.
Batters love to hate the high fastball.
With Thanksgiving right around the corner, here’s a cornucopia of investing items for you to chew on – in small portions:
It’s less than two weeks until Election Day. Here’s what Dennis thinks either a Trump re-election or a Biden presidency will mean for the Stock Market short term.
Starting a new job and have a 401K with an old employer? A caller to this week’s show is in this situation. At 37, he wondered if he should combine his former and current retirement plans into his old 401K OR roll the old funds into a new IRA. Dennis has the answer.
Assuming Joe Biden does become our 46th President, consider this fact: