News and Insights

March 13, 2026

How to Handle Sudden Wealth: A Smart Plan for a $3M Windfall

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

How to handle sudden wealth, what to do with a financial windfall, whether from an inheritance, a bonus, or a business sale.

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February 25, 2026

Scarcity and Compounding: Building Wealth In a Leveraged World

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

Should you own gold or bitcoin? This article breaks down inflation, government debt, central bank buying, liquidity cycles, and S&P 500 long-term returns to help investors understand diversification and portfolio strategy.

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February 12, 2026

The Financial Merger: Smart Money Moves for Newly Married Couples

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

Getting engaged is exhilarating. Between venue tours, guest lists, and the delicate politics of seating charts, one conversation often gets pushed to the bottom of the list: merging finances.

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January 15, 2026

The Case for Doing Less: How One Client’s First Step Became a Decade of Progress

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

Mark walked into my office in 2017 with a problem I see all the time among successful professionals. He wasn't struggling financially. Far from it. He was making $400,000 a year with significant assets already built up. The problem was simpler and more frustrating. He was paralyzed by options.

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December 10, 2025

Why Claiming Social Security at 62 Costs High Earners More Than They Realize

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

Many high earners hear the advice: “Claim Social Security at 62 and invest the difference.” The logic seems straightforward: take the money early, invest it, and come out ahead. But after years of advising high-net-worth professionals, I’ve seen that conventional wisdom ignores the tax strategy you’ve spent decades building. And the real cost is far greater than most people realize.

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November 12, 2025

The Executive's Emergency Fund Dilemma: When 6 Months Isn't Enough

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

You’ve probably heard the standard financial advice: set aside three to six months of expenses in an emergency fund. It’s solid advice for most Americans. But when you're earning in the top 1%, managing property in markets like NYC, San Francisco, or Boston, and covering private school tuition, conventional wisdom falls short. Your income may be high, but the cost of maintaining your lifestyle is equally high. Financial emergencies for executives are rarely small, and the standard playbook doesn't account for your reality.

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October 9, 2025

Why Your $500K Salary May Not Guarantee You a Rich Retirement

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

Walk around the Upper West Side on a sunny Saturday, and you’ll see strollers that cost more than your first car, and brownstones with freshly remodeled kitchens. It’s easy to assume everyone living this lifestyle must be financially secure. But that couldn’t be further from the truth. Even a $500,000 salary (or more) doesn’t guarantee a rich retirement. In fact, without intentional retirement planning and disciplined saving, many high earners end up with surprisingly fragile futures. The real challenge isn’t earning the money. It's about keeping it, growing it, and ensuring today's success translates into long-term security. That’s where the illusion of wealth can quietly sabotage even the highest earners, and it’s what we’re going to unpack in this article.

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September 11, 2025

From Saver to Spender: The Mental Shift Every Wealthy Retiree Must Make

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

You've done the hard work. Years of high-pressure meetings, endless emails, and the late nights only Wall Street and Madison Avenue require have paid off. Your net worth is no longer a someday goal. It’s sitting right there on your balance sheet. Yet here's what I see time and again with my high-net-worth clients: shifting from accumulation mode to spending mode isn't as easy as flipping a switch. I have spent more than a decade working with retirees and high-net-worth professionals in NYC, and if there’s one theme I see again and again, it’s this: the guilt, hesitation, or outright fear that comes with actually using money you’ve worked so hard to save. Your brain has been wired for saving. Spending feels like breaking a rule. But reframing the way you think about money can make all the difference.

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September 8, 2025

A Checklist for When a Spouse or Parent Passes Away

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

When someone we love passes away, whether it is a spouse, partner, or parent, the loss is more than emotional. It changes our daily lives in ways we can’t fully prepare for. The grief is real, and yet there is an immediate list of practical matters that still need to be handled. Between the emotional weight and the legal, financial, and logistical demands that follow, it is easy to feel overwhelmed and unsure where to begin.

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August 28, 2025

Top 5 Questions to Ask When Interviewing a Financial Advisor

Written By: Nathan Lee, CFP®

If you live and work in New York City, you already know the financial scene is as crowded as the 6 train at rush hour. There’s no shortage of financial advisors here. Some sit in corner offices of global firms, armed with thick pitch books and an army of analysts. Others run boutique firms, meeting clients over coffee in Midtown or Zoom calls squeezed in between back-to-back board meetings.

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April 23, 2024

A Young Family’s Close Call: Navigating Group Insurance Through Work vs An Individual Term Policy

At 32, Sarah and Michael had achieved their dream: successful careers, a charming new home, a healthy toddler, and a bright future ahead. Yet, an unforeseen event was about to change their lives when...

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June 1, 2026

You Can Retire Before 60 — But Only If You Do These Things in Your 50s

I’ve worked with people who had several million dollars saved yet still couldn’t pull the trigger on retirement. I’ve also worked with others who retired confidently and comfortably at 58 with far less. In every case, the deciding factor was preparation, not portfolio size, timing, or a stroke of good fortune. There was no perfect allocation or magic number. Knowing their true expenses, testing their plan while still working, and solving early-retirement problems before they arrived made the difference.

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May 26, 2026

The 7-Figure Retirement Tax Trap Most Pre-Retirees Fall Into

Robert spent 30 years building a $1.8 million IRA and never touched it in retirement. His pension and Social Security meant he didn’t need to. So it continued to grow. When he turned 73, his first Required Minimum Distribution was just over $140,000 due to the continued growth of his investments.

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March 17, 2026

Understanding the Tradeoffs in Early Retirement

Reaching age 60 with over $2 million saved for retirement places you in a position many people spend decades trying to reach. At that point, the question is often no longer whether retirement is possible, but whether continuing to work meaningfully improves your financial situation. For many households, the years between age 60 and Medicare eligibility at 65 create one of the most important planning windows in retirement. During this time, income often falls temporarily, creating opportunities to structure taxes, manage healthcare costs, and reposition retirement assets.

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December 10, 2025

Why Claiming Social Security at 62 Costs High Earners More Than They Realize

Many high earners hear the advice: “Claim Social Security at 62 and invest the difference.” The logic seems straightforward: take the money early, invest it, and come out ahead. But after years of advising high-net-worth professionals, I’ve seen that conventional wisdom ignores the tax strategy you’ve spent decades building. And the real cost is far greater than most people realize.

Read More
October 9, 2025

Why Your $500K Salary May Not Guarantee You a Rich Retirement

Walk around the Upper West Side on a sunny Saturday, and you’ll see strollers that cost more than your first car, and brownstones with freshly remodeled kitchens. It’s easy to assume everyone living this lifestyle must be financially secure. But that couldn’t be further from the truth. Even a $500,000 salary (or more) doesn’t guarantee a rich retirement. In fact, without intentional retirement planning and disciplined saving, many high earners end up with surprisingly fragile futures. The real challenge isn’t earning the money. It's about keeping it, growing it, and ensuring today's success translates into long-term security. That’s where the illusion of wealth can quietly sabotage even the highest earners, and it’s what we’re going to unpack in this article.

Read More
September 11, 2025

From Saver to Spender: The Mental Shift Every Wealthy Retiree Must Make

You've done the hard work. Years of high-pressure meetings, endless emails, and the late nights only Wall Street and Madison Avenue require have paid off. Your net worth is no longer a someday goal. It’s sitting right there on your balance sheet. Yet here's what I see time and again with my high-net-worth clients: shifting from accumulation mode to spending mode isn't as easy as flipping a switch. I have spent more than a decade working with retirees and high-net-worth professionals in NYC, and if there’s one theme I see again and again, it’s this: the guilt, hesitation, or outright fear that comes with actually using money you’ve worked so hard to save. Your brain has been wired for saving. Spending feels like breaking a rule. But reframing the way you think about money can make all the difference.

Read More
May 14, 2025

The Social Security Blind Spot: Do You Need Less for Retirement than You Think?

When I sit down with new clients to discuss their retirement goals, I can almost guarantee we’ll end up having some version of the following conversation: We start talking retirement numbers, and when I ask about their savings goals, they’ll throw out a figure. Usually, it’s something substantial like $5 million or more. “That’s what I need to retire comfortably,” they’ll say with conviction.

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January 29, 2025

Should I Draw From My 401(k) First To Delay Social Security?

Uncovering the retirement withdrawal iceberg and exploring whether it's better to draw from your 401(k) first or Social Security.

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March 30, 2026

I Built My Own AI Agent. Here's Why

Lately, I’ve been hearing more and more about people building their own AI agents to handle simple, everyday tasks. It got me thinking. Instead of just reading about it, I wanted to see if I could build something useful for myself. At the same time, I wasn’t interested in giving an AI tool access to my email or any sensitive financial information. So I started thinking about a problem I deal with regularly that didn’t require that level of access.

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February 12, 2026

The Financial Merger: Smart Money Moves for Newly Married Couples

Getting engaged is exhilarating. Between venue tours, guest lists, and the delicate politics of seating charts, one conversation often gets pushed to the bottom of the list: merging finances.

Read More
November 12, 2025

The Executive's Emergency Fund Dilemma: When 6 Months Isn't Enough

You’ve probably heard the standard financial advice: set aside three to six months of expenses in an emergency fund. It’s solid advice for most Americans. But when you're earning in the top 1%, managing property in markets like NYC, San Francisco, or Boston, and covering private school tuition, conventional wisdom falls short. Your income may be high, but the cost of maintaining your lifestyle is equally high. Financial emergencies for executives are rarely small, and the standard playbook doesn't account for your reality.

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July 1, 2025

How We Help Our Clients Enjoy Their Money Today While Saving for the Future

Balancing the desire to enjoy life now with the need to save for the future is a challenge, even for successful professionals. If you’re a high-net-worth executive in New York City, you know the feeling of saving aggressively, but you may still wonder, “Am I doing enough?” or, more pointedly, “Is it okay to spend some of this money?”

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May 28, 2025

Master the Manhattan Housing Market: Your Financial Advisor's Complete 2025 Success Guide

You're sitting in your corner office on the 42nd floor, looking down at the bustling streets of Manhattan, when it hits you. That rent check you write every month could be building equity instead of padding your landlord's retirement fund. Sound familiar? If you're a high-earning professional in New York City, the question isn't whether you can afford to buy property here. It's whether you can afford not to.

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April 25, 2025

Smart Money Moves: How NYC’s Top Earners Can Break Free from Credit Card Debt

A successful attorney steps out of her Upper East Side apartment, hails a cab to a Michelin-starred restaurant, and pays for a $500 dinner with the same credit card that’s carrying a $50,000 balance at 21% interest. She bills clients $700 per hour at her prestigious law firm, yet her investment account has remained untouched since she set it up years ago.

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April 9, 2025

The One Percent Shift: How Small Financial Habit Changes Lead to Massive Results

There’s something oddly sticky about habits, especially the bad ones. As a behavioral financial advisor, I’ve sat across from smart, successful professionals who make quick decisions all day long, only to watch them freeze when we talk about changing how they spend or save. It's not a lack of information. It's not even a lack of willpower. It’s the invisible weight of habit. I get it. I’ve been there too.

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January 22, 2025

The Financial Advisor Advantage: How to Maximize Compensation and Workplace Benefits

With the start of a new year comes bonus season—a time to celebrate the fruits of last year’s hard work and embrace fresh opportunities. There's something exhilarating about seeing that bonus hit your account. It's a reminder of your accomplishments and a chance to make some strategic moves for the future.

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May 14, 2026

The 529 Mistake Many High Earners Don't Know They're Making

When my wife and I opened our daughter’s 529 plan, it felt like one of those “we’re officially parents now” moments. I’ve helped open countless accounts for clients, but this time felt different. I was now in the same position so many parents find themselves in, creating a fund tied to a future we could only partially see, hoping to get it right from the start. We had already done the things you’d expect. Retirement savings were on track, our cash reserves were solid, and our income provided us with room to be proactive. So naturally, the conversation drifted toward how much and how quickly we should invest in the 529. The first instinct was to max it out. But I've seen what happens when a good tool gets used without context, so we slowed down and came up with a more balanced approach instead.

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June 4, 2026

A Balanced Look at the SpaceX IPO

With SpaceX preparing for a highly anticipated IPO on June 12th, I wanted to share some of my most interesting things I've read about this IPO. SpaceX is clearly one of the most innovative and important private companies in the world. Between its rocket launch business, Starlink, and its longer-term ambitions in space infrastructure and artificial intelligence, it is easy to understand why there is so much excitement around the company going public.

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April 9, 2026

The HSA Shoebox Method: A Smarter Way to Turn Medical Costs Into Wealth

A little while back, I wrote about the HSA Shoebox Strategy, and the response told me something right away. People understand the idea, but they are missing just how powerful it can actually be. Because this is not just about saving receipts or reimbursing yourself later. This is about turning everyday medical expenses into a long-term, tax-free wealth strategy if you structure it the right way.

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September 8, 2025

A Checklist for When a Spouse or Parent Passes Away

When someone we love passes away, whether it is a spouse, partner, or parent, the loss is more than emotional. It changes our daily lives in ways we can’t fully prepare for. The grief is real, and yet there is an immediate list of practical matters that still need to be handled. Between the emotional weight and the legal, financial, and logistical demands that follow, it is easy to feel overwhelmed and unsure where to begin.

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April 4, 2025

High-Net-Worth NYC Estate Planning: 10 Mistakes You Don’t Want to Make

You've spent decades building your wealth, climbing the corporate ladder in Manhattan, or perhaps building a successful practice on Park Avenue. Your investment portfolio is diversified, your retirement accounts are well-funded, and your children are set for the best education money can buy. But what happens to all of this when you're gone?

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May 16, 2024

What you need to know about the Inheritance Tax in New Jersey

At some point in our lives, we all face the moment of bidding farewell to a family member or friend. If you had a close relationship with the deceased, you might find that they have bequeathed something to you in their last will and testament. However, before you can officially take possession of the assets, there is one more concern to address: the inheritance tax on your newly acquired assets.

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May 7, 2024

Looking Ahead to 2026 and Beyond: High-Net-Worth and Ultra-High-Net-Worth Estate Planning

On January 1, 2026, current estate tax exemptions are scheduled to expire and return to 2017 levels — about half the levels they’re currently at. For high-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth estates, this means estate planning is that much more critical, as there are essentially only two ways to lock in the higher exemptions: dying or making a permanent gift of assets before January 1, 2026.

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November 5, 2023

Charitable Giving Through a Donor-Advised Fund (DAF)

In today's world, philanthropy and charitable giving have become increasingly important to many individuals and families. Whether you want to support a specific cause, make a positive impact on your community, or leave a lasting legacy, there are various ways to give back. One powerful tool that's gaining popularity is the Donor-Advised Fund (DAF). In this blog, we'll explore what a Donor-Advised...

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