Mr. Evensky is the founder of Evensky & Katz/ Foldes Wealth Management and a retired Professor of Practice of the Texas Tech University Personal Financial Planning Department. Prior to forming his own company, he served as a vice president of investments with major investment banking firms. Mr. Evensky received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in engineering and business from Cornell University. He is the past chair of the International CFP® Council, the CFP® Board of Governors, Board of Examiners, and Board of Appeals, and the TIAA-CREF Institute Advisory Board. He has served on the Editorial Advisory Board of the Journal of Financial Planning and the Journal of Retirement, and as the Research Columnist for the Journal of Financial Planning. He has also served on the National Board of the IAFP and the Charles Schwab Institutional Advisory Board and Council.
He is the recipient of the Financial Planning Association’s 2018 P. Kemp Fain Jr. award, the Institute for the Fiduciary Standard’s 2018 Frankel Fiduciary Prize, TD Ameritrade First Advocacy Leadership Award (2017), IMCA’s J. Richard Joyner Wealth Management Impact Award (2017), the Insider Forum Leadership Award (2014), the Charles Schwab Trailblazer IMPACT Award (2013), the Financial Planning Association “Heart of Financial Planning” Award (2013), and the Dow Jones Investment Advisor Portfolio Management Award for Lifetime Achievement (1999). In 2015, he was listed in Investment Advisor’s IA35, “thought leaders who have stood out over the past 35 years and will influence financial services for decades to come.” In 2013, he was listed as one of the profession’s 15 Transformational Advisors by Investment News. In 2010, he was included in Investment Advisor magazine’s “Thirty for Thirty” – Investment Advisor’s most influential in building the profession over the last 30 years.
Mr. Evensky is an internationally-recognized speaker on investment and financial planning issues. In addition, he has written for and is quoted frequently in the national press, and is the author of Wealth Management (McGraw Hill), co-author of The New Wealth Management, published in conjunction with the CFA Institute by Wiley & Sons, and co-editor of The Investment Think Tank: Theory, Strategy, and Practice for Advisers and Retirement Income Redesigned — Master Plans for Distribution (Bloomberg) and Hello Harold (Amazon eBook).
If you’re managing your own portfolio, there are temptations that can lead you astray, cause you to veer away from the investment strategy you’ve settled on, and cost you a lot of money. For example: sooner or later, you’re bound to hear a story about a company that’s headed for success—a great investment. The tip…
The person responsible for translating the math chapter of my book, Wealth Management, into Japanese told me, “You give me much headache.” Welcome to the math chapter. Okay, class, today we’re going to be discussing one of the most common activities for financial planners, namely, the calculation of investment returns. Accounting in some measurable way for changes…
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