|
|
About Us | Core Values | Our Team | About Rich Winer
|
WWM in the Media
The country's premier financial publications often turn to Rich Winer for the same prudent advice and expertise he provides his clients on a regular basis.
Here are some examples:
The Wall Street Journal
Active or Index Funds for '09 By Karen Hube Published January 4, 2009
"I don't think you're going to be able to make a lot of money just buying and holding an index (fund)," says Richard Winer, president of Winer Wealth Management, Inc. in Woodland Hills, Calif.
Mr. Winer says actively managed funds shouldn't "be painted with a broad stroke." "The important thing is to understand what part an actively managed fund should play in your portfolio, he says."
Ask your parents what they would like to achieve with their estate. Maybe they want to leave a sum to their favorite charity or bequeath money directly to their grandchildren. "Even if they have a strained relationship with their children, the grandparents often have this unconditional love for their grandkids," noted Los Angeles financial adviser Richard Winer.
"Adult children need to talk with their parents about their parents' estate plan and their own needs. It's important for the children to know what estate planning has been done. If the parents are financially able to help and make gifts to their children, the children should tell their parents exactly how they can help. Too often, there is no talk of the taboo subject of money - - and too often parents make gifts of one type or another without consulting their children and without realizing that another method of gifting might provide a greater benefit"
Click Here to Read the Full Article
How Retirees Are Blowing Their Nest Eggs By Kelly Greene Published June 27, 2005
Gerry Mandel, a Santa Cruz, Calif., magazine editor, and her two sisters inherited an IRA in 2002 from their mother. Four months ago, financial planner Rich Winer asked one of the sisters if they had taken the (IRD) deduction, and they had not. "Both my accountant and the accountant that my sisters used missed it," Ms. Mandel says. "On my return this year, it was over $7,000 as a deduction" - - enough to cover the tax she owed on her $17,000 withdrawal from the inherited IRA.
Click Here to Read the Full Article
Investors Pull $4.4 Billion From Putnam By Karen Damato Published November 7, 2003
Some investors also see shifting money as the moral thing to do. Richard Winer, a financial adviser in Woodland Hills, Calif., says he is moving client money away from fund firms that have allegedly been involved in improper or illegal fund-share trading because "I have no interest in rewarding them for that kind of behavior."
Click Here to Read the Full Article
Financial Planners Mull Tax Cuts' Impact On Investors By John Shipman Published January 8, 2003
"I tend not to get too excited until I see (the legislation) actually go through," said Richard Winer, a registered investment adviser in Woodland Hills, Calif.
Winer said once the legislation proposed by President Bush works its way through Congress, "it may look nothing like it looks now" so it's difficult to figure exactly how it will impact investors."
Click Here to Read the Full Article
Los Angeles Business Journal
Reel Money By Brett Sporich Published July 7, 2008
Several financial planners interviewed for this story cautioned against using retirement funds for high-risk investments such as motion pictures, commodities or even real estate. "Not only do you risk losing what you've built up in your account today, but you're risking the growth that can be built up over the next 5, 10, 15 or 20 years" said Richard Winer, chief executive of Winer Wealth Management, Inc. in Woodland Hills.
Click Here to Read the Full Article
San Fernando Valley Business Journal
More Americans Go Global in Investment Strategies Special Report: Money Managers Published July 7, 2008
Rich Winer, president of Winer Wealth Management in Woodland Hills, said that in the globalization of the economy now many U. S. companies earn most of their income from overseas operations.
"Companies themselves are becoming more global, so you almost have to invest overseas," Winer said. "Even investing in the U.S., you're still getting overseas exposure."
For now, Winer suggest to continue reaping the benefits of a waning dollar. "The weak dollar makes foreign investments that are un-hedged more attractive, but if the dollar rebounds, that advantage will go away," he said.
Click Here to Read the Full Article
Financial Planning Magazine: Career Advisor
The Music Man By Lauren Barack Published November 16, 2006
There's nothing like seeing an opportunity to grow his wealth management practice - - which is what Winer is hoping his new band connections (as guitarist for Band From TV) will do. "I'm networking in circles with people who can help my business," he says. "And I can also help them."
Winer acknowledges he's a terrible marketer, and he also doesn't want to push his services on his buddies (the celebrities in Band From TV) either. Instead, he's hoping his newsletter and specialized expertise in the retirement distribution planning area might be a lure. "The tax laws surrounding IRAs and qualified plans are extremely complex and convoluted," he says. "In the entertainment world, most business managers who often take on the role of financial planner know very little about the intricacies of IRA distribution planning. As a result, most will make costly mistakes and oversights and miss out on little-known opportunities to save their entertainment business clients a fortune in taxes."
Click Here to Read the Full Article
|
|
PEOPLE ARE TALKING
|
From The Wall Street Journal...
"Gerry Manadel, a Santa Cruz, CA. magazine editor, and her two sisters inherited an IRA in 2002 from their mother. Four months ago, financial advisor Rich Winer asked one of the sisters if they had taken the IRD deduction, and they had not. 'Both my accountant and the accountant my sisters used missed it,' Miss Mandel says. 'On my tax return this year, it was over $7,000 as a deduction' - - enough to cover the tax she owed on her $17,000 withdrawal from their inherited IRA."
 Kelly Greene
Retirement Planning Reporter
The Wall Street Journal | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|