Wealth Management

Managed accounts in defined contribution plans have long existed but suffer from low adoption, partly due to limited participant engagement. New technology now allows these accounts to personalize portfolios using more data than just age, potentially improving retirement outcomes. 

 

Providers are developing hybrid solutions like personalized target-date funds (PTDFs), which tailor asset allocations using existing data without requiring user input. However, experts stress that true personalization—and value—depends on incorporating outside assets and participant-provided details like retirement goals and risk tolerance. 

 

While artificial intelligence and subscription models may improve engagement, industry leaders see the ultimate goal as total household financial management. 


Finsum: Whether managed accounts can scale effectively and deliver on this promise remains a central question for the future of retirement planning.

Value investing pays off long term, but only a few funds consistently get it right—seven top performers just made the cut. Standouts like ClearBridge Dividend Strategy (LCBEX) and Dodge & Cox Stock (DODGX) delivered strong one-, three-, and five-year returns, outpacing peers with disciplined, research-driven approaches. 

 

Fidelity Equity-Income (FEKFX) and Fidelity High Dividend ETF (FDVV) combine yield with quality, offering income without overloading on risk. 

 

Oakmark Select (OANLX) and Natixis Oakmark (NOANX) take concentrated bets on undervalued giants, while WisdomTree U.S. LargeCap Dividend (DLN) adds a smart dividend tilt with broad exposure. On average, large-value funds gained 8.58% over the past year, but these funds beat that benchmark while sticking to sound fundamentals. 


Finsum: With interest rates remaining elevated, large cap could be more resilient compared to the small cap counter parts. 

Bitcoin recently surged past $110,000, signaling strong investor confidence in blockchain technology as a foundation for the future of money. Rebecca Walser of Walser Wealth Management believes this marks the beginning of a long-term upward trend, even if short-term volatility causes retrenchments similar to gold during liquidity crunches. 

 

She emphasizes that fluctuations—especially during periods of economic stress, trade negotiations, or capital raises—shouldn’t shake conviction in Bitcoin’s potential. 

 

Walser argues this evolution will eventually disrupt traditional fiat systems and require a fundamental shift in how banking operates. In her view, Bitcoin, as the original and most established digital asset, is poised to lead this transformation despite the expected market ups and downs.


Finsum: As central banks explore digital currencies and private cryptocurrencies like Ethereum and Dogecoin gain traction, blockchain is emerging as the inevitable backbone of global finance.

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