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Articles Written by Jon Henschen

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What’s Behind the War on Variable Annuities?

17:00 23 January in Articles Written by Jon Henschen by rafferty

January 22, 2019 By Jon Henschen, ThinkAdvisor Beyond the current fight over Ohio National trailing commissions, it seems that broker-dealers and regulators hate VAs; but for some investor clients, the security they offer makes them lovable. After the market carnage of 2008-2009, a number of advisors shared stories with me about clients who would literally kiss them in adoration, so grateful for the fact that their nest egg suffered no losses during this market turbulence because they were invested in variable annuities with living benefits. Clients like to make money. More importantly, they don’t want to lose money. Advisors who market principal protection often fulfill these objectives with variable annuities and fixed indexed annuities, which provide underlying guarantees. During the last two years, however, the regulatory environment has become increasingly hostile toward advisors that largely focus...

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What Deutsche Bank Left Off Its List of 30 Market Risks

17:09 07 January in Articles Written by Jon Henschen by rafferty

January 3, 2019 By Jon Henschen, ThinkAdvisor Ironically, one of the biggest risks to the global economy is Deutsche Bank's own derivatives business. Volatility and risk are of primary concern to advisors and investors in 2019. Deutsche Bank recently chimed in on these issues, releasing what it sees as the 30 primary risks for the New Year: Algo-driven, risk parity-driven fire sale in equities and credit continues Slowing growth in China and Europe slowing down the U.S. economy Slowing growth in China and Europe triggering significant U.S. dollar appreciation Tailing U.S. Treasury auctions and/or declining bid-to-cover ratios Increased U.S. T-bill issuance continues to push 3-month Libor-Overnight Index Saw wider Increased U.S. Treasury issuance pulls dollar out of investment-grade credit and equities Higher hedging costs continue to lower European and Japanese appetite for U.S. credit ...

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Is New York City Entering a Pension Death Spiral like Chicago?

17:04 14 December in Articles Written by Jon Henschen by rafferty

December 11, 2018 By Jon Henschen, Intellectual Takeout As bad as the situation in Chicago is, with a public pension system $42 billion in the red, New York has even worse exposure. Its standings include $65 billion in unfunded pension liabilities, $100 billion in unfunded retiree health care, and a city debt of approximately 50 billion – for a grand total of $215 billion. These problems are likely driven by unsustainable policies, such as the one where city workers with 10+ years of service get free health care for life. Thus, while the private sector has long used 401K plans funded by the employee with small contributions from the employer, the public sector still enjoys generous benefit plans constitutionally guaranteed and funded by New York’s taxpayers. According to Eric Boehm of Reason, New York City has been spending...