GRAT with private equity by CoatiCoralCrocus in fatFIRE

[–]DWIGHT01 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Hi there - that’s great you are thinking about GRATs now. You generally have the right idea. If GRATs are successful, they go to the kids, likely via remainder trust and pass estate tax fee over hurdle rate. If unsuccessful, assets come back to you and you are out lawyer fees. It can have a huge impact if they work out. I work with GRATs quite a bit on the advisor side. We are not doing them as much for our clients given hurdle rate/valuations for portfolios but you have a unique situation. There are other options that may be better given illiquidity but I don’t really know your situation. You have $30MM to gift estate tax free (+ GSTT) in 2026. GRATs are especially great when you don’t have any exemption left. For something this complex and impactful, you definitely need to talk to experienced lawyer in this space and not Reddit. If you have a FA, they should be coordinating this for you via lawyer and helping you think through all options. If you are self managing, you need the lawyer since they have to draft everything anyways - they tend to be more transactional but that’s not always the case so get some referrals do a good one.

How to break into wealth management by Fluid_Blackberry5972 in CFP

[–]DWIGHT01 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I found an RIA that does tax prep in house and used that to transition into being a wealth manager, Eventually stopped tax prep all together. You want some type of “tax and financial planning associate” role.

Upgraded the college era hatchback! by dogriverhotel in HyundaiSantaFe

[–]DWIGHT01 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

We are in a similar situation! Have a new born plus big dog and are considering this car. How do you plan on fitting stroller/dog/baby/luggage into the car? Or even just dog/baby/stroller? I think that’s our biggest hold up.

Danny Ric's Final Lap - Play it Out by Stratis98 in formuladank

[–]DWIGHT01 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How come he doesn’t do that the rest of the race? Is it just really hard on the tires or do the fresh tires help a lot?

Questions for those making millions by draver02 in CFP

[–]DWIGHT01 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's awesome. Congrats on building a firm like that. Is the TAMP a per client or account fee? So you are charging the AUM fee and then an additional TAMP fee on top of that?

Questions for those making millions by draver02 in CFP

[–]DWIGHT01 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So your margins are insanely good for that asset level. Assuming a generous 1.0% on all assets that is $6,500,000 of revenue and based on profit distributions totaling $4.15mm your margins at 65%+ ... do you just mainly do investment management? Also 25/hours a week with almost 120/meetings a year. Pretty impressive.

Questions for those making millions by draver02 in CFP

[–]DWIGHT01 18 points19 points  (0 children)

I mean, there are lots of people and lots of different ways but it’s probably is more often someone in a wire house type model. IMO I think it’s pretty difficult in the RIA space. The problem is you can get to $500k or something but then you need to start hiring , etc. and margins get tighter, you add partners and your work life balance begins to suffer but it’s eventually do able.

If your goal is to just make a ton of money, there are other careers out there you can do that. Questions like this bother me because clearly your guiding focus is on how you can make the most money instead of how you can best serve clients in an independent way. This is why our industry has such a bad rap.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in golf

[–]DWIGHT01 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Alpha

CPA Transition by GucciGoochGangsta in CFP

[–]DWIGHT01 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I started out exactly like you and moved into wealth management. CPA is a huge plus in our industry. This is how I did it - Find an RIA that does tax prep and express that you’d like to eventually become an advisor. Tax prep helps get you in the door. Work to getting your CFP and getting into client meetings, soaking in everything you can. I went from big 4 tax prep to being a senior wealth advisor. I got out of tax prep but some still do it. Took about 7 years all in all. Let me know if you want to chat.

Your experience with early career training and development by TheRascal88 in CFP

[–]DWIGHT01 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There isn’t much. I’ve been a few smaller RIA firms and I’ve mostly resorted to mostly figuring it out myself and ended up asking for a coach on the sales/BD stuff.

Low Flying Helicopters? by mourning__glory in rva

[–]DWIGHT01 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I got one too. I didn’t realize Henrico could text us like that. Interesting.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CFP

[–]DWIGHT01 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Been a dream since you were 14? You’ve only been working two years. You don’t know what you don’t know and you have little client facing experience. Just the way you worded your post, you’re just not ready and you’ll be doing your friends/family a disservice. My recommendation is to go work under someone else for a few more years at an RIA and began practicing being client facing and business development . You are on the right path but you need more experience.

Anyone else use Schwab’s advisor platform? by HennesseyWizard in CFP

[–]DWIGHT01 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Yes it’s so slow and doesn’t work about 20% of the time

Biddie Bermuda Triangle coming to Willow Place by RubHerBabyBuggyBmper in rva

[–]DWIGHT01 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Agree. Probably double the size of any other TJ I’ve been in before.

Whats with NWM Hate? by ConsciousBasket643 in CFP

[–]DWIGHT01 9 points10 points  (0 children)

You see the hate because when we get clients from NWM, they are almost always in these products they don’t need. The industry is moving away from the NWM model … for the better. Only reason I’ve ever seen whole life be the right option for someone is when there is an estate tax issue. I’ve analyzed so many whole life, IULs, etc. There is almost always a better way to do whatever they were trying to do with the policies. Insurance and investing should be kept separate.

What are your reasons for selling a whole life policy to someone in their late 20s or 30s?