Elder Care Matters About Elder Care Matters ElderCare Matters Alliance Ask an Elder Care Expert Elder Care Matters Library Find Elder Care Experts Near You Contact ElderCare Matters

Investments

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters.com: "I am an Elder Care Professional with 15 years experience in helping families with their elder care matters. Should I be listed on ElderCareMatters.com?"

Answer:  If you are a professional who helps families plan for or deal with ANY of their elder care matters, then you owe it to yourself to be listed on America's #1 online source for "Elder Care Experts"….

ElderCareMatters.com

ElderCareMatters.com is where you will find more than 2,000 competent, caring elder care experts located across America, including:

  • Elder Law Attorneys
  • Estate Planning Advisors
  • Financial Planners
  • Investment Advisors
  • Geriatric Care Managers
  • Insurance Professionals
  • Life Care Planners
  • Professional Organizers
  • Reverse Mortgage Lenders
  • Senior Move Managers
  • Senior Real Estate Professionals
  •  Tax Advisors
  • Aging in Place Professionals
  • Daily Money Managers
  • And other elder care experts with long and successful careers working with seniors and their families

This is also where you will find some of America's best:

  • Assisted Living Communities
  • Alzheimer's / Memory Care Communities
  • Continuing Care Retirement Communities
  • Home Care Agencies

Together, we provide families across America with:

  • Unparalleled professional expertise
  • Up-to-date elder care information & answers to your elder care questions
  • Competent, caring assistance with a wide range of elder care services

So if you are a competent, caring elder care professional who helps families with ANY of their elder care matters, then request today an Application for Membership in the national ElderCare Matters Alliance and get listed on ElderCareMatters.com - America's #1 source for "Elder Care Experts" plus information and answers about a wide range of elder care matters.

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO
ElderCare Matters, LLC
ElderCareMatters.com

 

 

 

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters.com: "Would you please provide me with a list of all the 87 different elder care services that the members of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance provide on ElderCareMatters.com?"

Answer:  It is my pleasure to provide you with the following list of the 87 different elder care services that are currently provided by the members of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance on ElderCareMatters.com:

  1. Accounting Services
  2. Adult Day Care
  3. Advance Medical Directives
  4. Aging in Place Services
  5. Alzheimer's / Memory Care Communities
  6. Annuities
  7. Arbitration
  8. Asset Protection Planning
  9. Assisted Living Communities
  10. Assisted Living Referral Services
  11. Bankruptcy
  12. Bill Paying
  13. Budgeting
  14. Caregiving Education
  15. Companion Care
  16. Conservatorship
  17. Consumer Law
  18. Continuing Care Retirement Communities
  19. Cremation Services
  20. Crisis Intervention
  21. Daily Money Management
  22. Dementia Care
  23. Disability Income Insurance
  24. Disability Planning
  25. Elder Abuse Litigation Services
  26. Elder Law
  27. ElderCare Planning
  28. Estate Administration
  29. Estate Liquidation
  30. Estate Planning
  31. Family Law
  32. Financial Planning
  33. Funeral Services
  34. Geriatric Care Management
  35. Guardianship
  36. Health Insurance
  37. Hoarding Clean Up and Coaching Services
  38. Home Care
  39. Home Downsizing Services
  40. Home Health Care
  41. Home Modifications
  42. Hospice Care
  43. Independent Living Communities
  44. Investment Services
  45. Life Care Planning
  46. Life Insurance
  47. Litigation
  48. Long Term Care Insurance
  49. Long Term Care Planning
  50. Medicaid Planning
  51. Medical Services
  52. Medical Alert Systems
  53. Medical Claims Processing
  54. Medical Equipment & Supplies
  55. Medical Malpractice Litigation
  56. Medicare Consulting
  57. Medicare Supplemental Insurance
  58. Medication Management Services
  59. Moving Services
  60. Nursing Homes
  61. Personal Finance
  62. Powers of Attorney
  63. Probate
  64. Professional Organizing
  65. Public / Non-Profit Resources
  66. Real Estate Services
  67. Rehabilitation Services
  68. Residential Psychiatric Care
  69. Respite Care
  70. Retirement Planning
  71. Reverse Mortgages
  72. Securities Arbitration & Litigation Services
  73. Senior Housing
  74. Senior Move Management
  75. Senior Move Planning
  76. Senior Relocation Services
  77. Social Security Disability Services
  78. Special Needs Planning
  79. Tax Law
  80. Tax Planning
  81. Tax Preparation
  82. Transportation Services
  83. Trustee / Fiduciary Services
  84. Trusts
  85. VA Benefits
  86. Wills
  87. Wound Care

The goal of ElderCareMatters.com is to provide families across America with the help they need to plan for and deal with their elder care matters.  Let us know if there are other elder care services that you would like to have us list on ElderCareMatters.com – America's #1 source for Elder Care Experts plus information & answers about a wide range of elder care matters.

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO, ElderCare Matters, LLC
ElderCareMatters.com
1-877-379-4500

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters.com: "I’m the trustee on my parent’s trust. Parts of the trust’s assets are held in the stock market. With the recent market fluctuations, can I be held responsible for any losses the trust’s stock may have sustained?"

Answer:  Generally, a fiduciary is a person who manages property for the benefit of another, exercises discretionary authority or control over an asset(s), and/or renders comprehensive and continuous investment advice.  When you accept the role to trustee, you are a fiduciary and accordingly you become personally liable to all trust beneficiaries.  Liability is not determined by the performance of investments but by whether you followed “prudent investment practices”.   

The Prudent Investor Act sets forth 7 Uniform Standards of Care to avoid being found liable for investments losing value:

  1. Know standards, laws, and trust provisions.
  2. Diversify assets to the specific risk/return profile of the trust.  Each trust and beneficiary will have specific cash flow requirements and risk return objectives.  The interests of all need to be weighed.
  3. Prepare an Investment Policy Statement (IPS).  The IPS is basically a business plan for the trust’s investments.  It lays out goals and policies regarding trust investments.
  4. Use “prudent experts” (lawyers, money managers, CPAs) and document due diligence.  Unless you are an experienced professional this can be a daunting task.  Any slip up and you could be paying out of your pocket.  Hiring an expert, so long as you use due diligence in determining their qualifications, and your liability is eliminated.
  5. Control and account for investment expenses.  It is your role to make sure that the trust is paying a fair fee for the professional services.
  6. Monitor the activity of “prudent experts”.  Monitoring the investment professional is part of using due diligence.  You, as trustee, want to be sure the money manager is not taking funds and is working toward accomplishing the goals stated in the IPS.
  7. Avoid conflicts of interest and prohibited transactions.  Although this seems silly, trustees often violate this principal.  A trustee cannot use entrusted assets for personal or business gain.   

This is one of the most common areas of litigation we see today.  Especially with the market falling and stocks losing value, people are afraid to make changes and are standing still, thinking that if they do nothing they will not be liable for losses.  NOT TRUE.  Trustees do not need to personally guarantee every investment decision is successful.  What a trustee should do is follow a system that ensures you are following the Prudent Investor Act standards.  There is a 5 Step Investment Management Process you can use to be sure you are within the prudent investor standard:

  1. Analyze Current Position.  This is where you review current investment activates, disbursements, investing strategies and policies, and legal constraints.  You examine what the trust’s investment picture currently looks like.
  2. Design the Optimal Portfolio.  This is where you propose optimal asset allocation strategies and suggest any changes, keeping in mind the current market.
  3. Formalize Investment Policy.  The policy should include investment objectives, guidelines, as well as guidelines for selecting and monitoring money managers, if you have them.
  4. Implement Policy.  Here you would propose a number of alternative money manager structures, negotiate favorable fees and coordinate brokerage services.
  5. Monitor & Supervise.  In monitoring the investments you would prepare detailed monthly appraisal and transaction report as well as quarterly reports that compare performance of the trust’s investments against the performance of the market and the state objectives.  

To answer your question, as long as you followed the 7 Uniform Standards of Care and the 5 step process for managing investments you will not be found liable for any investment losses. 

To find  competent, caring elder care professionals across America who are located near You and can help you with your elder care matters, go to: www.ElderCareMatters.com - A FREE online resource to find elder care experts plus elder care information & answers to your elder care questions.

Dennis B. Sullivan, Esq., LLM, CPA
Estate Planning & Asset Protection Law Center of Dennis Sullivan & Assoc.
Wellesley, Massachusetts  02482
781-237-2815
Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, Massachusetts chapter 

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters.com: "The article you wrote for ElderCare Matters Library says I should own stocks for my retirement income. Twice in the last decade I have watched my 401(k) lose almost one-half of its value. That doesn’t sound like a good retirement plan to me. Am I looking at this wrong?"

Answer:  Unfortunately, in most 401(k) plans, your account balance is dependent almost solely on the overall market level. After you retire, you will be able to roll the balance into a self-directed IRA in which you can own individual stocks, especially stocks that pay dividends. In many cases the dividends a company pays are far more stable than the share price of the company’s stock.  

Think of owning a rental property that pays you $1,000 per month in rents. If the market value of that property drops in half, it doesn’t mean your rent drops also. The key is the stability of the rental income, not the market value of the property. Focus your retirement income planning on creating a monthly cash flow and try to put account values in perspective.

To locate experts in your state who can help you with these elder care financial matters, go to: www.ElderCareMatters.com - America's online source for elder care experts plus information & answers about a wide range of elder care matters.

Philip C. Benedict, CFP
Benedict Financial Advisors, Inc.
Atlanta, Georgia  30328
770-671-8228
Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, Georgia chapter

www.ElderCareMatters.com – Experts, Information & Answers

At last, families across America have one resource they can tap into daily to relieve the stress of aging…

ElderCareMatters.com

 

ElderCareMatters.com, along with the 1,350+ members of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, provides families with the elder care resources they need to plan for and deal with their issues of aging.  In fact, here is where you will locate, by state, some of America's top elder care professionals who provide a total of 68 different elder care services that will help you plan for and deal with your family's issues of aging, including:

  1. Advance Medical Directives
  2. Aging In Place Services
  3. Alzheimer's / Memory Care Communities
  4. Annuities 
  5. Arbitration 
  6. Asset Protection Planning
  7. Assisted Living Communities 
  8. Assisted Living Referral Services
  9. Bankruptcy
  10. Caregiving Education 
  11. Consumer Law
  12. Continuing Care Retirement Communiities
  13. Crisis Intervention
  14. Daily Money Management / Bill Paying
  15. Disability Income Insurance
  16. Elder Abuse Litigation Services
  17. Elder Law
  18. ElderCare Planning / Long-Term Care Planning
  19. Estate Administration
  20. Estate Liquidation
  21. Estate Planning
  22. Financial Planning
  23. Geriatric Care Management
  24. Guardianship / Conservatorship
  25. Health Insurance
  26. Hoarding Clean Up and Coaching Services
  27. Home Care
  28. Home Downsizing Services
  29. Home Health Care
  30. Home Modifications
  31. Hospice Care
  32. Independent Living Communities
  33. Investment Services
  34. Life Care Planning
  35. Life Insurance
  36. Litigation
  37. Long-Term Care Insurance
  38. Medicaid / Disability Planning
  39. Medical / Healthcare
  40. Medical Alert Systems
  41. Medical Claims Processing
  42. Medical Equipment & Supplies
  43. Medicare Consulting
  44. Medicare Supplemental Insurance
  45. Medication Therapy Management
  46. Moving / Relocation Services
  47. Personal Finance / Accounting / Tax Preparation
  48. Powers of Attorney
  49. Probate
  50. Public / Non-Profit Resources
  51. Real Estate Services
  52. Rehabilitation Services
  53. Residential Psychiatric Care
  54. Respite Care
  55. Retirement Planning
  56. Reverse Mortgages
  57. Securities Arbitration & Litigation Services
  58. Senior Move Management
  59. Senior Move Planning
  60. Social Security Disability Services
  61. Special Needs Planning
  62. Tax Law
  63. Tax Planning
  64. Transportation Services
  65. Trustee / Fiduciary Services
  66. Trusts
  67. VA Benefits
  68. Wills

 

If you and your family need help with your elder care matters, this is where you will find competent, caring elder care experts located near you who provide a total of 68 different services that will help you plan for and deal with your family's issues of aging.  Whether you are looking for:

  • an elder law attorney in Philadelphia
  • a geriatric care manager in South Florida
  • a long-term care insurance professional in Fort Worth,
  • a home care provider in Southern California, or
  • an assisted living community in Phoenix (as shown in the photo above)…

you can count on www.ElderCareMatters.com to help you find the Elder Care Experts and services that you will need in ALL 50 states (plus the District of Columbia).


 

Special Offer for ALL Elder Care Professionals:  The next 125 elder care professionals who apply for Lifetime Membership in the national ElderCare Matters Alliance will receive a 25% discount off the regular price of lifetime membership.

So if you are a competent, caring elder care professional – take advantage of this special 25% discount offer and pay only $337.50 for a "lifetime membership" (and there are no annual membership dues, ever!) in the national ElderCare Matters Alliance.   

To request a Membership Application, send an email to: info@ElderCareMatters.com.

Question of the Day: "How can I become one of the Elder Care Experts on www.ElderCareMatters.com and help families across America plan for and deal with their issues of aging?"

Answer:  If you are an elder care professional and you would like to "get the word out to thousands of families across America in a cost effective way about how you can help them plan for and deal with their issues of aging", then you should join our 1,250 elder care experts as a lifetime member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance.  And, now, if you are one of the next 250 members, you will receive a 25% discount off the regular lifetime membership price.

This 25% discount is available only to the next 250 elder care professionals who join the national ElderCare Matters Alliance.

So if you are a competent, caring elder care professional – take advantage of this special 25% discount offer and pay only $337.50 for a "lifetime membership" (and there are no annual membership dues, ever!) to the national ElderCare Matters Alliance.

To request an Application for Lifetime Membership, send an email directly to: psanders@eldercarematters.com

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO
ElderCare Matters, LLC
1-877-379-4500
www.ElderCareMatters.com

Special Offer: Next 250 Professional Members Receive 25% Discount

If you are an elder care professional and you would like to "get the word out to thousands of families across America in a cost effective way about how you can help them plan for and deal with their issues of aging", then you should join our 1,250 elder care experts as a lifetime member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance.  And, now, if you are one of the next 250 members, you will receive a 25% discount off the regular lifetime membership price.

This 25% discount is available only to the next 250 elder care professionals who join the national ElderCare Matters Alliance.

So if you are a competent, caring elder care professional – take advantage of this special 25% discount offer and pay only $337.50 for a "lifetime membership" (and there are no annual membership dues, ever!) to the national ElderCare Matters Alliance.

To request an Application for Lifetime Membership, send an email directly to: psanders@eldercarematters.com

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO
ElderCare Matters, LLC
1-877-379-4500
www.ElderCareMatters.com

Question: When you need a quick answer about an elder care matter, who can you ask?

Answer:  The experts of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance.

ElderCareMatters.com is now offering a NEW Ask an Elder Care Expert service.

Each week one of our 1,200 experts will answer your family's important questions about elder care matters – from legal, financial, housing, health care, etc.

If you would like to ask one of our Elder Care Experts a question about his/her areas of expertise, just send a short email (a few sentences only please) to:  Questions@ElderCareMatters.com

Every day we will post one of your questions along with an answer provided by our Featured Elder Care Expert of the Week to the homepage of www.ElderCareMatters.com (which is currently visited by thousands of families each week).  Yours may be one of the questions posted.

So bookmark www.ElderCareMatters.com and visit us daily as questions about a wide range of elder care matters are answered by some of America's top elder care professionals with years of experience helping families plan for and deal with their issues of aging.

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO
ElderCare Matters
1-877-379-4500
www.ElderCareMatters.com

ElderCare Matters Alliance now has 1,200 professional members

The ElderCare Matters Alliance is a national organization of 1,200 elder care experts who help families across America plan for and deal with their issues of aging, including providing families with a host of elder care resources that can be found on www.ElderCareMatters.com

If you are a competent, caring elder care professional – you need to belong to the national ElderCare Matters Alliance.

To request a Lifetime Membership Application to the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, send an email to psanders@ElderCareMatters.com

www.ElderCareMatters.com – America's online source for elder care experts who help families plan for and deal with their issues of aging.

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO
ElderCare Matters
www.ElderCareMatters.com

“What does 'fiduciary' mean as it applies to financial advisors and why should I as an investor care?"

Answer:  The word fiduciary stems from the Latin root word fīdere, to trust. Applied to financial advisors, the term fiduciary ethos describes the “leadership behaviors, core values, and decision-making process an advisor uses to make recommendations that are in the best interest of the client.”

 As a consumer and investor, you would hope that a fiduciary standard is widely upheld. It is not. Brokers and other sales people operating largely in a transaction mode merely have to recommend products that meet suitability standards. By virtue of net worth, income level, liquidity level, or some other criteria, a product may be deemed suitable, and no disclosure of conflicts of interest is required. Heavily loaded or proprietary house products may be pushed based on compensation incentives, sales quotas, or other mandates, even if more appropriate products are available.

Regulators are considering application of a fiduciary standard to all financial advisors, including insurance agents and brokers employed in large Wall Street firms. The Financial Planning Association (FPA) has campaigned for the universal application of fiduciary standard for all financial advisors, yet the idea remains controversial. Companies with captive sales forces that sell house brands do not like the idea at all.

Ethos leadership behaviors may be framed within a 6-step process. Anyone who gives advice to another, including you “talking to yourself,” can follow the six steps. Taken from the book Fiduciary Ethos: Living In A Fiduciary World, Volume One: Investment Management by Donald B. Trone (Strategic Ethos, Mystic, CT, 2010), step one is to define the roles and responsibilities of decision-makers. An advisor should provide appropriate solutions based on holistically explored goals and objectives, rooted in inductive and deductive reasoning, with personal biases recognized and neutralized. If in a conversation you feel like a target in a shooting gallery, or you are being pressured for a decision, fiduciary ethos is not being applied.

Step two, analyze. Deep analysis is required to understand your goals, objectives, challenges, opportunities, problems, constraints, relationships, and capabilities, so that interrelated and practical judgment can be brought to the fore.

Step three, strategize. An essential leadership behavior is one of innovation, evaluating the big picture from a macro- and micro-viewpoint, the advisor as a creative and opportunitistc problem solver. What is your tolerance for risk, for example, and have all risk factors been explained and placed in perspective? What is the best alternative to be applied to the challenge or opportunity?

 Step four, formalize. What strategy represents the greatest probability that your goals and objectives will be achieved?

 Step five, implement. What resources are available to power the selected strategy? Is the policy to be followed well defined, written down, and agreed to by all parties? Have tools and methodologies been selected, explained as to application, with service agreements in place that do not contain provisions that can conflict with the objectives?

Step six, monitor. Is there a dynamic, synergistic, and earnest process to insure that you and your advisory team stay on task, and make course corrections as necessary? Much damage is done by “hit and run” sales tactics or one-time engagements that do not provide for on going service, diligence, and follow up. Is there a process for periodic qualitative reviews of decisions made and decision makers?

Ethos leadership standards should be applied to every facet of financial services, indeed any service relative to your health, wealth, and spiritual well being. A fiduciary standard of care should be applied to investment management, estate and trust planning, gifting and philanthropy, business planning, and family matters. With the aging of America and rising concern amongst family members, social workers, caregivers, and regulators over abuse of the elderly, nothing less than a strict fiduciary ethos should be accepted.

That such ideas remain controversial should be unacceptable, period!

Lewis J. Walker, MBA, CFP, CRC
Past national president of The Institute for Certified Financial Planners
Norcross, Georgia  30092
678-205-0229
Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, Georgia chapter

"I'm concerned about my money in the stock market. My accounts have been up and down the last few years, and with all that's happening right now and all the bad news, I just can't see anything positive. What should I do?"

Answer:  In times of extreme economic volatility we want our assets invested in things that can adapt and prosper and we believe that is globally dominating companies.  We like companies that pay steady dividends, and have a long history of increasing their dividends.   

Over the next decade about one billion people will enter the realm of middle class in what we still tend to call the emerging markets.  These middle class people will want more and more of the good life.  They will buy everything from paper towels to chocolate bars to basic automobiles.  This will be a giant wave.

Anyone who is serious about creating wealth and/or protecting existing wealth needs a significant position in high-quality, globally dominating corporations.  Many of these companies are priced right, have very manageable debt, have a lot of excess cash and are well positioned to take advantage of the millions and millions of people that are climbing the economic ladder in the emerging economies of Asia and South America.

Philip C. Benedict, CFP
Benedict Financial Advisors, Inc.
Atlanta, Georgia  30328
770-671-8228
More Information about this ElderCare Matters Alliance member