Harold Evensky
Harold Evensky (Born September 9, 1942[1]) is a Certified Financial Planner (CFP), an Accredited Investment Fiduciary (AIF) and president of Evensky & Katz,[2] a fee-only financial planning firm.[3] He is also an author, editor, and engineer.[4]
Biography
Born Harold Ray Evensky in Memphis, Tennessee, Evensky moved to New Orleans with his family at age four. After earning a Bachelor of Civil Engineering and a Masters of Science from Cornell University,[4] he worked as an engineer and builder in Louisiana, Ohio, and Florida, before becoming a financial adviser.
After some time as a vice president of investments for Bache & Co. (later acquired by Prudential Financial) and Drexel Burnham Lambert,[5] he and his cousin Peter Brown opened up a private practice in 1986 under the name Evensky & Brown. In 1990, Chicago-based financial adviser Deena Katz merged her practice to form Evensky, Brown & Katz, where he served as company chairman.[6] The new firm would go through a number of changes, including joining with partner Robert Levitt, parting with Levitt some years later,[7] facing the retirement of co-founder Brown in the early 2000s,[8] and relaunching the company as Evensky & Katz on its 20th anniversary in 2004.
Financial planning
Evensky was dubbed the "Dean of Financial Planning"[9] by Don Phillips, CEO of Morningstar, and is largely seen as one of the top fee-only financial planners in the country.[10]
Evensky's legacy to the industry is seen through his personal appearances to adviser organizations and his development of codifying his successful practice style through literary works. He has addressed conferences throughout the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia, Asia, South Africa, and the United Kingdom.[2]
Evensky is frequently quoted in a number of financial trade publications, newspapers, internet articles, Blogs, and magazines. Evensky is a contributing writer for Financial Advisor Magazine and The Asian Financial Planning Journal,[11] research columnist for the Journal of Financial Planning, and a member of the editorial review board of the Journal of Financial Planning.[2] He wrote the books Long Term Health Care (Houghton Mifflin, 1990) and Wealth Management (McGraw Hill, 1996 [in Japanese, 1999 and in Korean, 2003]).
He has also co-edited two books with his business partner and wife, Deena Katz, titled The Investment Think Tank: Theory, Strategy, and Practice For Advisers (ISBN 1-57660-165-X) and Retirement Income Redesigned: Master Plans for Distribution (ISBN 1-57660-189-7 by Bloomberg Press) where he also wrote a chapter for each.
In addition to his literary works in the field of Financial Planning, Evensky served on a number of different financial advisory boards, including as chairperson of the TIAA-CREF Institute Advisory Board, the International CFP Council, the CFP Board of Governors, the CFP Board of Examiners, and the CFP Board of Appeals,[12][13] as well as a member of the national board of the International Association for Financial Planning (IAFP) and the Charles Schwab institutional advisory board and council. Currently Evensky is a member of the Financial Planning Association, the Academy of Financial Services, The CFA Institute, and as an association member of the American Bar Association. He is also a co-founder of the Alpha Group, an association of senior investment advisors.
Later career
After owning a home for a short time in Lubbock, Texas, Evensky and his wife and partner Deena Katz opened a financial office there in May 2008.[14][15][16]
Evensky also increased his involvement in the Personal Financial Planning (PFP) Program at Texas Tech University, where Katz had accepted a faculty position. Serving as an Adjunct Graduate Professor, he taught a behavioral finance course for the program, and a graduate level Wealth Management course since the fall of 2008.[17]
Accolades
On October 20, 2013, Evensky received the Financial Planning Association's Heart of Financial Planning Award, granted jointly to Evensky and his wife and business partner Deena Katz. In granting the award, FPA cited Evensky and Katz's work "educating current and future advisers through teaching, internship coordination and writing books."[18]
Evensky was named one of the five "Movers, Shakers & Decision Makers, The Most Influential People in the Financial Planning Profession" by Financial Planning Magazine. He is also cited by Accounting Today in their "Top Ten Names to Know in Financial Planning". Worth Magazine named Evensky as one of the top 100 Financial Advisers each year from 2002–2006.[19]
Investment Advisor has named both him and his wife/partner as members of The IA 25, a listing as the most influential people in finance on multiple occasions.[12][13] The 2004 edition, appearing in May of that year, featured both of them on the cover. In January 2004, he appeared on the cover of Investment Advisor with his wife to speak about the changes to their firm, their personal life, and on the profession over the previous years.[20]
In 2002, Evensky's paper titled Changing Equity Premium Implications for Wealth Management Portfolio Design, won the Journal of Financial Planning's "Call for Papers" competition, and in 1999 Evensky was awarded the Dow Jones Investment Advisor Portfolio Management Award for Lifetime Achievement.[21] His firm has pioneered the investment strategy of Core & Satellite, a relatively new strategy that uses passive management over "Core" positions and a blend of passive and active management over opportunity driven Satellite positions.[22]
His firm's fee schedule was praised by Investment Advisor Magazine as an example of integrating wealth management and Advisory Services.[23]
References
- ↑ Miami Today Advertisement, September 2002
- 1 2 3 http://www.fpanet.org/member/meetings/online_education/09-14-05.cfm FPANet.Org Biography
- ↑ Free Preview - WSJ.com
- 1 2 http://www.investmentadvisor.com/issues/2004_01/cover_story/2664-1.html Investment Advisor Bio
- ↑ http://www.depts.ttu.edu/pfp/vita/H_Evensky_07.pdf
- ↑ Katz, Deena: Deena Katz on Practice Management: For Financial Advisers, Planners, and Wealth Managers, Page 26
- ↑ http://www.keepmedia.com/pubs/FinancialPlanning/2003/05/01/540437?extID=10037&oliID=229 Robert Levitt Article
- ↑ Brown, Peter: "Letter to Clients" 2001
- ↑ Wealth Management, The Irwin/IAFP Series in Financial Planning, Harold R. Evensky, Book - Barnes & Noble
- ↑ http://www.wealthmgmt.com/250-best-financial-advisers.html
- ↑ http://www.investmentadvisor.com/issues/2004_01/cover_story/2658-1.html Asian Financial Planning Journal
- 1 2 Investment Advisor Magazine, "IA 25" Issue, 2003 May
- 1 2 Investment Advisor Magazine, "IA 25" Issue, 2002 May
- ↑ Building Portfolios for a World of 2.5% Gains - Barrons.com
- ↑ http://www.evensky.com/default.asp?P=538513&S=538493
- ↑ EverythingLubbock.com Media Player
- ↑ Texas Tech University :: College of Human Sciences :: APS :: Division of PFP :: Faculty
- ↑ http://www.fpanet.org/professionals/AboutFPA/PressRoom/IndustryLeadersFindWaystoEmpowerndGrow/
- ↑ http://www.worth.com/Issues/October-2006.asp Douglas McWhirter, Worth Magazine October 2006 Pg 62 & 64
- ↑ http://www.investmentadvisor.com/issues/2004_01/cover_story/2658-1.html Investment Advisor January 2004
- ↑ http://www.aifg.org/aifg/evensky.cfm American Institute of Financial Gerontology Bio for Evensky
- ↑ http://www.fpanet.org/journal/articles/2005_Issues/jfp0205-art2.cfm Jahnke, William "Modeling Retirement Income", Journal of Financial Planning, 2005 February On-line Addition
- ↑ http://www.investmentadvisor.com/firstlook/0706coverstory.html IA July 2006 Cover Story