Posts Tagged ‘chartered’

CWM Chartered Wealth Manager ™ – The World’s First Graduate Wealth Management Certification and Charter.

Thursday, March 7th, 2013

CWM   Chartered Wealth Manager ™  – America’s  First Graduate Wealth Management Certification and Charter.   

CWM ®  Chartered Certified Wealth Manager ® – An AAFM ® Owned and Issued Certification awarded from the USA United States of America.  Why Global Standards are Important.

The CWM  ® Chartered Certified Wealth Manager  ®  professional certification  awarded from the AAFM ®  American Academy of Financial Management  ® is the first graduate wealth management Charter & Board certification in the world – as featured in the FINRA, NASD,  Investopedia, Forbes,  China Daily, Financial Times, Black Enterprise, Wall Street Journal,  and Money Manager[1][2] that was created and founded by the AAFM American Academy of Financial Management [3][4]. The internationally trademarked CWM ® Chartered Certified Wealth Manager AAFM ®  Certification [5] and credential is only available for wealth managers with an accredited masters degree, law degree, CPA, PhD or specialized executive training from an ABA accredited law school [6] or other approved program in Asia, Europe, India, Latin America or Africa. In 2004, Robert Frank of the Wall Street Journal published an expose of the top Wealth Management educational programs and certifications including the AAFM, Wharton School of Business and New York University.

The CWM Certified ( Chartered Wealth Manager ) [7] designation and post-graduate qualification is exclusively issued and conferred by the USA Board of Standards American Academy of Financial Management  ® over the last decade (AAFM) [8][9] The CWM wealth management certification & designation is similar to financial planning certification but is a graduate certification and professional development program in high net worth consulting which has always required a government recognized education and degree.[10] The CWM  Chartered Certified Wealth Manager ® Law School Curriculum and syllabus has been accepted for use with ABA Accredited Law School Programs.[11] Wealth Management is a profession and career that many bankers and investment professionals are entering.[12] Like any accredited law school graduate courses, the AAFM CWM certification courses[13] will count toward a post graduate degree such as a LLM or JSM, will count for continuing education for CPA and Law Licensing, and may count towards the CPA exam eligibility.

The CWM Chartered Wealth Manager Board Certification [14] from AAFM USA requires knowledge in 12 key areas:[15] and is referenced in the Global Designation Directory and on the FINRA US Government Regulatory Website [16][17]  The primary required skill sets of a CWM would include: 1. Estate Planning and Trusts 2. Asset Management 3. Portfolio Management 4. International Taxation 5. Retirement Law 6. Economics 7. Investments 8. Money and Banking 9. High Net Worth Consulting 10. Relationship Management, Compliance, and Ethics 11. Business Entities & Organizations 12. Risk Management and Insurance

Educational institutes and training organizations must petition to the AAFM www.AAFM.us to become an accredited provider of the CWM Chartered Wealth Manager program.

Governmental Citations &  Book References

  1. ^ ” Wall Street Journal – Is Your Wealth Manager Certifiable? features AAFM CWM Wealth Management Certification “
  2. ^ “CWM Featured in The Money Manager
  3. ^ AAFM Investopedia Dictionary Article
  4. ^ “Investopedia CWM Article”
  5. ^ “AAFM US Government Trademark Reference”
  6. ^ “Post Graduate CWM Law School Certification Program”
  7. ^ “RIA Compliance Solution book”
  8. ^ AAFM CWM in Investopedia Dictionary
  9. ^ “US Government Trademark Reference for CWM “
  10. ^ “The ElderLaw Portfolio Series, Volume 1‎ – Page 25-16Harry S. Margolis”
  11. ^ ABA Accredited TJSL LLM Graduate Program in Finance and Taxation offering CWM from AAFM
  12. ^ “AAFM CWM in the Book Career opportunities in banking, finance, and insurance By Thomas P. Fitch Pg. 251″
  13. ^ “AAFM Law School Certification”
  14. ^ “Demystifying Wall Street”
  15. ^ “AAFM US Board and Certifying Requirements”
  16. ^ “Directory of Global Professional Accounting and Business Certifications By Lal Balkaran”
  17. ^ “FINRA Governmental Regulatory Website Formerly NASD”

AAFM American Academy of Financial Management  ® and CWM ® External links

Over 800 Accredited Graduate Programs which qualifies you to apply for CWM Certification ™ .  You must have 3 years of wealth management experience on top of having the graduate degree or courses.

  1. Masters in Finance, Wealth Management, Tax or Economics from an ACBSP Accredited Double Business School.
  2. Masters in Finance, Wealth Management, Tax/Accounting or Economics from an AACSB Accredited Double Business School.
  3. Masters with focus on Finance, Wealth Management, Tax or Economics from an ABA Accredited Law School.
  4. Masters in Finance, Wealth Management, Tax or Economics from an EFMD EQUIS Accredited Double Business School.
  5. Masters Degree in Finance from CUFE Beijing Business School
  6. MBA or MSC from Shanghai Graduate Program in Finance
  7. Masters in Wealth Management from the Swiss Banking School
  8. JSM or LLM from the Diamond Law School Wealth Management Program

Wealth Management – Tax Time and Beyond

Tuesday, April 10th, 2012

As a wealth management consultant and professor for over a decade, it is that time again to file our taxes. With tax filings, we must document our income, expenses, deductions, exemptions, retirement contributions and so forth. Some of us must file our taxes for partnerships or corporations.

Wealth management comprises various subjects including: Economics, Banking, Investments, Risk Management, Investment/Asset Management, Estate Succession, Taxation, and Trust Planning and Retirement Planning.

Many of us simply receive W-2 and employment income and traditional company benefits primarily, but others who are self-employed or contractors are doing their best to utilize the system to declare income, pay for insurance, take mortgage deduction and so forth.

The good news is that that the tax code has become more amicable to the self employed over the last decade. Self employed individuals are able to write off or deduct more of their health care expenses while also setting aside more money pre-tax into their self directed retirement accounts.

Here are some thoughts related to Wealth Management 2012

Investments: While we are not sure what will happen with taxes going forward, several of today’s tax rates on income such as dividends and long-term capital gains are reasonable. If they go up, many people may sell out of dividend stocks or other related holdings. Dividend stocks have been particularly popular for retirees and those who don’t want CDs with the rates so low.

Thus, dividend stocks have been the alternative for income producing investments because the tax rates are at 15%. Overall, if income taxes go up on dividend stocks at this time, the hardest hit may be seniors and those who live on a fixed income.

Retirement and Education: In light of the present situation, we hope you are able to maximize your contributions to your retirement before April 15th each year. Also, setting aside money in a 529 plan is a good way to fund a child or grandchild’s education for the future. The annual gifting rules and estate and gift tax rules allow you to gift cash to others during life or at death. Therefore, now may be a good time to consider large gifts due to the generous estate & gift tax exemption for 2012.

Estates and Succession: As for estate taxes, those rates right now are the most generous ever. However, the large exemption may be reduced again to the Clinton era rates if nothing is done by Congress before 2013.

The other major estate management issues are succession documents. Do you have a valid will? Do you have health care directives? Have you considered limited powers of attorney for your financial affairs or health care affairs? Have you arranged for the guardianship of your children if something happens to you? All of these issues can be dynamic and very important?

Insurance: Other topics are risk management related. Do you have proper life, health, and home insurance? Have you considered an umbrella policy or disability policy? Again, protecting yourself and your family in this way is imperative. However, you must remember that insurance contracts have beneficiaries and that each policy can have primary beneficiaries or secondary beneficiaries. Further, these assets are not controlled by your will and the beneficiary receives regardless of what your will says. Providing the policy numbers and information to your loved ones may also be a good exercise.

Banking and Investment Accounts: Additionally, if you have bank or brokerage accounts, you should consider listing your spouse or loved one as person who receives the account upon death. TOD “Transfer on Death” and POD “Payable on Death” accounts are typical choices for your accounts and this allows a loved one to have access to cash immediately if something happens to you. Sometimes, rolling over or consolidating accounts is a great exercise so as to help create a better view of the totality of your investments.

Taxation: The IRS has a tax tips section which is interesting and resourceful. Moreover, there are many great tax software programs out there to chose from that you can use privately on your computer. Thus, with good information coming from the Treasury Department and quality software, all of us have a fair opportunity to get our tax paperwork done on time.

Economics: Keep in mind that there has been a number of economic cycles in the last 20 years in the USA and Internationally. That means that we should all keep an eye on our risk tolerance and our investing time horizon. When you are getting closer to retirement, you should be moving out of riskier investments and into more stable investments or stocks with less volatility if possible. Other related problems such as an election year and global debt crisis issues domestically and abroad are also now part of the macro-economic effects.

In the end, most people are concerned with financial security. During our earning years, all of us want to work in a labor of love, earn what we can, protect our children and retirement, and worry about taxes later. In the end, the key is doing what you want to do, and have the experts handle your legal, tax and wealth management for you.

*No investment, legal or tax advice is intended to be given herein. Please see a licensed professional before making any important decision.