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One major issue every new President faces is the increasing wealth gap, and one way to help ease that discrepancy is the baby bonds government-funded financial program.
The looming social security backing is one of the pressing items on President Biden s to-do list. They see the baby bonds idea as a new pitch that would address the current crisis. For a while, the financial concept has been around, which has intensified the currency among economists, financial planners, and legislators as a budding fix for retirees income disparity and social insecurity.
Financial adviser Ric Edelman thinks this could be an economic game-changer for millions of Americans, helping to close the racial wealth gap.
Arbor Digital and Blockchange Partner on Digital Asset SMA for Registered Investment Advisors
The new SMA eases the onramp for RIAs to expose clients to digital assets, and is the first to create value for investors across the entire asset class, rather than being limited to Bitcoin or Ethereum. It combines the simplicity of a trust or fund with the flexibility, tax advantages, and lower cost of owning the underlying digital assets.
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Blockchange Inc, the digital asset investing platform for professional wealth managers, and
Arbor Digital, an SMA manager for RIAs on their journey to digital assets, today announced a new Separately Managed Account (SMA) option for digital assets. The
Retirement baby bonds could help close the racial wealth gap washingtonpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtonpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Michael: I’m doing well. How are you?
Carl: Fantastic. Yeah. Things are super good.
Michael: Excellent. Well, I wanted to follow up on our last episode where you had kind of thrown this comment out there that I feel like we have to come back to. You had said, as we were kind of ranting on the problems of having overly broad, overly general websites that aren’t specific enough to anybody, to motivate to action, you had made this comment of, “We ask our websites to do too much.”
Carl: Yeah.
Michael: And I’m curious to go a little bit deeper on this, what you meant by that. Obviously, I’ve got a few views of my own around websites and marketing because I kind of live in that world as well. But I am just wondering, where are you going, exactly, with, “We ask our websites to do too much”? What does that mean?