Returns matter. But it's the overlooked gaps in protection, not underperformance, that cause permanent, irreversible damage to wealth. These are the conversations we have before anything else.
Most financial plans are built around growing wealth. These are the six reasons wealth disappears, and why addressing them first is what sets a real plan apart from a managed account.
A significant market downturn in the first years of retirement can permanently impair your portfolio, even if markets fully recover a decade later. The math is unforgiving: withdrawing from a declining portfolio locks in losses at the worst possible moment. Most retirees have no cash buffer or income floor strategy in place to protect against this.
"If markets dropped 30% the day you retired, what's your income plan for year two?"
Business owners, professionals, landlords, and high-net-worth individuals carry personal liability exposure that standard homeowner and umbrella policies rarely cover fully. A single judgment from a car accident, a tenant dispute, or a business claim can reach assets you assumed were protected. Proper structuring through LLCs, trusts, and layered insurance changes that exposure dramatically.
"Could a lawsuit tomorrow erase what it took you thirty years to build?"
The average couple faces over $300,000 in long-term care costs. Memory care facilities now run $8,000–$12,000 per month in many markets. Without a dedicated funding strategy, this falls entirely on your investment portfolio, often at exactly the moment markets are down. Most clients have no plan. Hybrid insurance, asset-based strategies, and Medicaid planning can change that exposure significantly.
"If you or your spouse needed extended care tomorrow, who pays, and for how long can your portfolio sustain it?"
Poorly structured portfolios and estates can transfer 30–50% of accumulated wealth to taxes that proper planning would have legally eliminated or significantly deferred. Roth conversion windows, IRMAA thresholds, capital gains timing, required minimum distributions, and estate tax exemptions all create planning opportunities that disappear if left unaddressed too long. Tax planning is year-round work, not a filing-season afterthought.
"How much of your estate will actually reach your children, after federal and state taxes are done with it?"
Seventy percent of affluent families lose their wealth by the second generation. Most estate plans were written for a different life, before the divorce, the business sale, the new grandchild, the changed tax law, or the estranged family member. Life changes constantly. Estate plans rarely update themselves. Annual review, beneficiary audits, and trust structure alignment make the difference between wealth that transfers and wealth that doesn't.
"When did you last review your beneficiary designations, trust structure, and powers of attorney?"
Research consistently shows that investor behavior destroys more long-term wealth than market downturns themselves. Panic selling, overconcentration in familiar assets, chasing recent returns, or simply failing to rebalance: these are the real culprits. The average equity fund investor underperforms the fund they're invested in, purely due to timing decisions. A disciplined advisor who keeps you from making the wrong move at the wrong moment may be the highest-value part of this relationship.
"When markets dropped in 2022, did your advisor help you stay the course, or were you making those decisions alone?"
A 30-minute conversation. No cost, no obligation, no pitch. Just an honest look at your exposure, and what addressing it could mean for your family.
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