Tuesday, March 31, 2026

259. When a Financial Advisor Faces His Own Mortality

 



For many years, I have talked to clients about uncertainty.

I have explained the need to prepare for illness, disability, loss of income, and even death. 


I have always believed that financial planning is not just about money, but about protecting the people we love from the risks of life.

But recently, those conversations became deeply personal.

For the first time in my life, at 62 years old, I was hospitalized.

  • Lying in a hospital bed changes the way a man thinks. 
  • Especially when he has spent much of his life helping others prepare for the future. 

In those quiet moments, I was no longer thinking as a financial advisor speaking to clients. 

I was thinking as a husband, a father, and simply as a man confronted by his own frailty.

Thoughts came that were difficult to ignore.

  • Have I prepared my own family well enough?
  • If something happens to me, will they be secure?
  • Have I truly practiced what I have preached?

Beyond the fear of sickness itself, there was also the fear of unfinished responsibilities, unfinished conversations, and unfinished plans. 

Illness has a way of removing all distractions. It forces you to look at what really matters.

In moments like that, titles, targets, and production figures lose their shine.

What matters most becomes very simple: faith, family, health, time, and the peace of knowing that your affairs are in order.

This experience reminded me that mortality is not just something financial advisors discuss with others. 

  • It is something we must also face ourselves. 
  • And perhaps that is one of the most humbling lessons of all.

We spend so much time helping others prepare for uncertainty. 

But we must also ask whether we have done the same for our own lives.

A hospital room has a way of making that question impossible to avoid.

I came out of that experience with greater gratitude, greater humility, and a clearer sense of what truly matters. 

Our work matters. But the life behind the work matters even more.

Sometimes, the financial advisor also needs to be reminded:

  • Preparation is not just something we recommend.
  • It is something we must live.

#acgadvice

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

258. In Uncertain Times, Your Clients Need Your Calm More Than Your Forecast

 

Be the client’s stabilizer, not their alarm bell.

Right now, the global backdrop is marked by elevated geopolitical risk, oil-price pressure, renewed inflation concerns, and uncertainty over when major central banks can ease rates. 

The IMF’s January 2026 update still expects global growth to hold up, but it explicitly warned that geopolitical escalation is a key downside risk; more recent reporting shows energy-price shocks are already complicating the inflation and rate outlook in multiple markets.

That means your clients do not need more noise. They need perspective, prioritization, and disciplined decisions.

Here is the advice I would give financial advisors today:


1. Lead with reassurance, not prediction

Clients are usually most vulnerable when headlines are loud

In periods like this, the advisor who tries to sound like a market prophet often loses trust. 

The better role is interpreter: explain what matters, what does not, and what actions are still sensible even under uncertainty. 

That is especially important now because inflation is easing in many economies but remains above comfort levels in several places, while energy shocks could reverse progress.

A strong message to clients is:

“We do not need to guess every headline correctly. We need to make sure your plan can survive them.”


2. Return every conversation to first principles

In uncertain times, clients are best served by going back to the old fundamentals:

protection, liquidity, debt discipline, diversification, and long-term suitability.

That is not old-fashioned. It is exactly what periods like this demand.

For most clients, the right order is:

    • Protect income and health
    • Maintain emergency liquidity
    • Control expensive debt
    • Keep investments aligned with time horizon
    • Avoid emotional switching

This is especially relevant in the Philippines, where recent official and OECD assessments suggest inflation could move back toward the midpoint of the BSP target as temporary tailwinds fade, and where peso weakness can also feed into prices. BSP has also warned that materially higher oil prices could push inflation beyond target.


3. Serve clients by separating “urgent” from “important”

Many clients will come asking about war, oil, markets, rates, or whether they should move everything. Your real service is to help them distinguish between:

what is urgent in the news, and what is important in their household balance sheet.

For example:

A market drop is news.

    • Being underinsured is important.

Oil spikes are news.

    • Having no emergency fund is important.

Rate uncertainty is news.

    • Carrying costly revolving debt is important.

That framing calms clients and makes the discussion productive.


4. Review liquidity with more seriousness than usual

When uncertainty rises, liquidity becomes more valuable. 

Even if savings returns do not fully beat inflation, accessible cash protects clients from forced selling, distress borrowing, and panic decisions. That matters more when households may face higher fuel, transport, and borrowing costs if global tensions persist.

For many clients, your best service right now is not selling something new. It is checking whether they have enough accessible reserves for:

    • job interruption
    • medical events
    • business slowdown
    • family emergencies
    • loan amortizations during disruption


5. Reframe investing around time horizon, not headlines

The wrong question is:

    • What will the market do next?”

The better question is:

    • When will this money be needed?

That one question helps determine whether the client should:

    • stay invested,
    • rebalance,
    • reduce concentration,
    • or keep near-term money out of volatile assets.

This is where advisors create value. Not by predicting the next month, but by matching assets to purpose.


6. Increase communication frequency before clients ask

The best advisors in difficult periods do not go silent. They check in first.

A brief note to clients today could say:

“Given the current global uncertainty, this is a good time to review your protection, emergency fund, debt load, and investment time horizon. My job is to help you make calm, sound decisions—not reactive ones.”

That positions you as steady, available, and useful.


7. Make protection planning more concrete

In uncertain periods, insurance advice becomes easier to understand because risk feels more real.

Serve clients best by reviewing:

    • life coverage adequacy
    • health and critical illness gaps
    • disability or income protection exposure
    • estate liquidity
    • beneficiary designations

When families feel exposed, they do not need abstract product features. 

They need to understand what happens financially if income stops, illness strikes, or credit obligations continue.


8. Watch for behavior risk, not just market risk

Today’s biggest danger for many clients is not necessarily product failure. It is behavioral error:

    • cancelling long-term plans too early
    • surrendering protection to ease short-term pressure
    • chasing “safe” fads after losses
    • overconcentrating in cash for too long
    • borrowing for lifestyle while feeling uncertain about the future

Advisors earn their keep by preventing expensive emotional mistakes.


9. Focus your value proposition on decision quality

The clearest positioning for a financial advisor today is this:

“I help clients make wise financial decisions under uncertainty.”

That is stronger than leading with returns, product features, or market views.

It tells the client:

    • you are disciplined,
    • you are prudent,
    • and you are there to protect judgment when emotion is high.


10. The single best advice

If I had to compress it into one line for a financial advisor today, it would be:

Help clients strengthen their financial foundation before chasing financial opportunity.

That is how you serve them best in a world where growth still exists, but downside risks remain real and can change quickly.

A practical script you can use with clients today:

“This is not the time for panic and not the time for neglect. It is the time to make sure your protection, liquidity, debt position, and long-term plan are in proper order. Let us review those first.”


All the best my friends!!

#acgadvice