Are there financial advisors who are really different? There are advisors who operate very differently from the stereotypical product-pusher, but you have to know what to look for and how to verify it. What “different” really means For an advisor who is genuinely different, look for: Acts as a fiduciary all the time, not just “when providing advice”. Is paid only by you (fee-only: flat, hourly, or % of assets) with no commissions or kickbacks from products. Provides comprehensive planning (tax, retirement, estate, risk, cash flow), not just portfolio sales. Key structural signs Fee-only vs. commission/fee-based Fee-only: compensated solely by client fees; no product commissions or revenue sharing. Fee-based/commission: may earn both fees and product commissions, creating conflicts of interest. Fiduciary commitment Registered investment advisors and many CFP prof...
Most major Wall Street outlooks currently do expect a positive, though more modest, gain for US stocks in 2026, not a flat or down year. What Wall Street Is Pricing In Large strategists’ S&P 500 targets cluster in low- to mid‑single‑digit to low‑teens price gains (roughly 3–13% price upside), plus dividends. FactSet’s earnings aggregation points to about 15% S&P 500 EPS growth in 2026, which historically has been consistent with at least some positive equity return, even if multiples compress. Key Bullish Supports Forecasts generally assume: continued (but slower) US growth around a bit above 2%, falling recession odds near 30%, and incremental Fed easing supporting risk assets. Multiple houses (Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Yardeni, etc.) see a fourth straight up year driven primarily by earnings growth rather than further valuation expansion. Why Upside May Be Smaller Consens...