Financial Life Planning

“People have the potential to live longer than any other time in history. This gift of extra time requires that we fundamentally redefine retirement and our life journeys leading up to it.” What is “Retirement’?  Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies

Financial Life Planning connects the dots between our financial realities, our values and the lives we long to live. It helps both pre-retirees and retirees identify their core values and connect them with their financial decisions and life goals. It is an financial planning and investing approach which helps people manage their portfolio.

Financial life plan focuses on the human side of financial planning, including people’s anxiety, habits, behaviors and other emotions (e.g., fear and greed) tied to investing money and accumulating wealth. People struggling with retirement and other finances really need a plan that helps them manage their attitudes, habits, goals and resources.

George Kinder, known to most as the “father” of the life planning, is the founder of Kinder Institute. He views life planning as “a way of holistically delivering financial planning that focuses on delving into people’s real goals, beyond just their financial concerns, in an effort to help them use their money to deliver freedom into their lives”.

Financial Life Planning combines personal finance and wellness. It spends time to discussing life planning and to building an intentional life. There is more to living a life of freedom and purpose than money and wealth. To live a life of freedom and purpose, people are encouraged to consider George Kinder’s famous Three Questions, which are:

Question 1: Design Your Life

“I want you to imagine that you are financially secure, that you have enough money to take care of your needs, now and in the future. The question is, how would you live your life? What would you do with the money? Would you change anything? Let yourself go. Don’t hold back your dreams. Describe a life that is complete, that is richly yours.”

Question 2: You have less time

“This time, you visit your doctor who tells you that you have five to ten years left to live. The good part is that you won’t ever feel sick. The bad news is that you will have no notice of the moment of your death. What will you do in the time you have remaining to live? Will you change your life, and how will you do it?”

Question 3: Today’s the day

“This time, your doctor shocks you with the news that you have only one day left to live. Notice what feelings arise as you confront your very real mortality. Ask yourself: What dreams will be left unfulfilled? What do I wish I had finished or had been? What do I wish I had done? ”

Society tends to attribute personal and professional success to the acquisition of material things and the accumulation of wealth. Most of us find ourselves inextricably caught in a cycle of earning, spending, and investing often induced by societal and peer pressures to fit into a perceived definition of success.

And in spite of this, how many times have we heard from even well-to-do friends, acquaintances and relatives that they are not exactly happy with how their lives have shaped up, how they don’t enjoy what they are doing, how they are drowning in debt or living paycheck to paycheck, or how they don’t have any time to pursue their dreams and interests?

If you look closely, there is a common undercurrent running across all these statements that we find ourselves ‘enslaved’ to a script or lifestyle broadcast by social media which was not exactly aligned to our values and innermost dreams.

No one ever wanted to spend more time in the office

“No one ever said on their deathbed ‘I wish I’d spent more time at the office.’ ” Harold Kushner

Having read many anecdotal reports regarding end of life issues, it is important what truly matters to most people in the end. Typically, people do not say that they wish they had earned more money, spent more time at work, or had one more side hustle.

Most often instead, they wish they had spent more time with family and friends. They had more experiences with those that they love. They had taken better care of their health and bodies over the decades. They had saved more and planned better for their retirement. And finally, they wanted to make sure that those they left behind would be taken care of once they were gone.


References:

  1. https://www.kiplinger.com/article/retirement/T023-C000-S004-retirees-build-a-financial-plan-based-on-you.html
  2. https://www.kinderinstitute.com
  3. https://www.kitces.com/blog/george-kinder-institute-life-planning-podcast-seven-stages-maturity/
  4. Podcast: #FASuccess Ep 015: Why Life Planning Is Simply Financial Planning Done Right With George Kinder

Vanguard will offer Private Equity Investments

Vanguard turns to what many view as the ‘dark side’ of investing, the world of complex, exclusive, expensive private equity investments

Vanguard Group plans to offer a private equity investments which will be managed by an outside firm called HarbourVest Partners. Initially, the private equity investment will be available only to institutions such as endowments and nonprofit foundations. But, Vanguard intends to move quickly beyond institutional investors.

Over time and as regulations change, Vanguard hopes to offer these private equity strategies to its individual, non-qualified retail investors.

Typically, private equity firms charge fees that are 2% of assets a year in management fees, plus 15% to 20% or higher of total returns in annual performance fees. Generally, money is locked up for years with little liquidity. This is why the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has long kept smaller, non qualified investors out of them.

In a statement, Vanguard chief executive Tim Buckley said, “Private equity will complement our leading index and actively managed funds, as we seek to broaden access to this asset class and improve client outcomes. While this strategy will be initially available to institutional advised clients, we aim to expand access to investors in additional channels over time. For individual investors in particular, this partnership will present an incredible opportunity — access and terms they could not get on their own.”

Contrasting Viewpoint

Eric Walters, founder of Silvercrest Wealth Planning, believes Vanguard’s move is “fraught with risks.” He added, “I think it could work if they are able to access top-quartile private equity managers, most of which are closed to new subscriptions”. Additionally, he added, “Managers below the top quartile often don’t do any better than public equities and often do worse. When you add the high fees and long holding periods, accessing lower-tier managers would be a bad deal for Vanguard clients.”

About Vanguard

Vanguard is one of the world’s largest investment management companies. As of December 31, 2019, Vanguard managed $6.2 trillion in global assets. The firm, headquartered in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, offers 424 funds to its more than 30 million investors worldwide. For more information, visit vanguard.com.

About HarbourVest

HarbourVest is an independent, global private markets investment specialist with over 35 years of experience and more than $68 billion in assets under management, as of December 31, 2019.


References:

  1. https://www.forbes.com/sites/antoinegara/2020/02/05/vanguard-pushes-into-private-equity-by-accessing-dealmakers-like-stephen-schwarzman-robert-smith-and-orlando-bravo/#3431f0bf2760
  2. https://www.harbourvest.com/news/vanguard-and-harbourvest-announce-private-equity-partnership
  3. https://www.inquirer.com/business/vanguard-harbourvest-mortimer-tim-buckley-private-equity-20200206.html
  4. https://www.investmentnews.com/vanguard-puts-private-equity-investments-on-the-menu-187888

Developing Good Financial Habits

“It’s not the big things that add up in the end; it’s the hundreds, thousands, or millions of little things that separate the ordinary from the extraordinary.” Darren Hardy, author of The Compound Effect

Financial planning in small steps doesn’t take large sums of money to start.  In fact, financial planning can have a profound impact on financial security for Americans, especially lower-income households, by helping people improve their saving and budgeting habits. A written plan helps savers prioritize their goals and provides a way to measure success.

A disciplined, steady approach to saving, investing and ruthlessly managing spending wins out. Wealth-building habits don’t involve a get-rich-quick scheme —it is a slow, gradual process to accumulate wealth,” you must be persistent and consistent.

Savings habits

“The real cost of a four-dollar-a-day coffee habit over 20 years is $51,833.79. That’s the power of the Compound Effect.” Darren Hardy

While investing may appear at times to be complicated and risky, saving is pretty straightforward. Two-pronged approach to increase the saving amount:

  • Generate more cash inflow.
  • Reduce cash outflow.

Spending and saving often go hand in hand because whatever you don’t spend is potential savings. That’s why it is important to focus on buying things that will hold value or appreciate in value instead of allowing expenses to eat into savings through continuous consumption. To accumulate wealth, it is critical to manage expenses tightly. Instead of living just within your means, it is important to live below your means.

One way to reduce outflow is to maximize tax savings through retirement plans such as the 401(k). Another is to pay off debt and prioritize by paying the debts with the highest interest rate first.

Keep an eye on the prize

“There is a one thing that 99 percent of “failures” and “successful” folks have in common — they all hate doing the same things. The difference is successful people do them anyway.” Darren Hardy

Following the adage that it becomes easier to reach your destination or to achieve a successful outcome with an end goal in mind. Those who gain wealth believe that everything they do is ultimately done to fulfill their financial goals. For example, people should set a “retirement number” and a deadline for reaching that number. That number is the goal for how much cash and investments they need for a comfortable retirement and the deadline is the date to achieve the goal. Every time you put money toward saving, you’re a step closer to the prize.

Set It, But Don’t Forget It

Setting up an automated savings and payment system is one habit highly successful people practice to keep their financial house in order. They automate their savings, investing, bill payments and money transfers. But they don’t ‘set it and forget it’ once they set up the automated system. They know it’s important to maintain awareness and manage regularly, at least weekly, where their money’s going.

Automatic saving and investing

People have to be consistently reminded that to develop habits of saving and investing. The more you do develop the habit of saving and investing for the long term, the easier it will become. Consequently, it is recommended to set automatic savings protocols, if necessary, so a portion of your earnings goes directly from your paycheck into a separate savings account.

Habitually and automatically save 10% to 20% of every paycheck.


References:

  1. https://www.bankrate.com/finance/investing/financial-habits-of-wealthy.aspx
  2. https://jamesclear.com/book-summaries/the-compound-effect

10 Steps to a DIY Financial Plan | Charles Schwab

  • Key Points
    • A financial plan isn’t only for the wealthy and it doesn’t have to cost a penny.
      No matter how much money you have, you can start with a DIY financial plan that will set you up for future success.
      With a good foundation in place, you can feel more confident about your finances and, when the time comes that you might need the help of a professional, you’ll be that much farther ahead.

    Did you know that 78 percent of people with a financial plan pay their bills on time and save each month vs. only 38 percent of people who don’t have a plan? That’s a pretty powerful statistic if you ask me. Or would it surprise you to learn that 68 percent of planners have an emergency fund while only 26 percent of non-planners are financially prepared to cover an unexpected cost?

    When I hear stats like these that were recently reported in a Schwab survey, it just reinforces my belief that everyone—no matter their financial situation—can benefit from a financial plan. So why aren’t more people planners? Usually it’s because either they don’t think they have enough money or they think a financial plan costs too much. But, as I’ve said many times, neither is the case.

    In fact, you can map out your own financial plan. That way, not only won’t it cost you a penny, but you stand to reap the long-term benefits. Here’s how to get started mapping out your financial future with a DIY plan.
    — Read on www.schwab.com/resource-center/insights/content/10-steps-to-diy-financial-plan

    Conspicuous Spending and Skyrocketing Debt

    “The hard truth is: the amount of money we earn is not always directly proportional to the amount of money we save because, more often than not, the more money we make, the more we spend.” David Bach, author “The Automatic Millionaire”

    Let’s face financial reality and an inconvenient truth. Whether on Main Street, Wall Street or Pennsylvania Avenue, Americans continue to have and have long had a spending problem. Government statistics and other studies show that Americans’ spending has generally risen in the years since the 2008 – 2009 Great Recession. This trend is reflected in Americans’ general pattern of consumer spending and reflected in the rising levels of consumer, corporate and public debt which has topped a whopping $75.3 trillion in 2019 according to the stats coming out of the Federal Reserve.

    Moreover, Gallup found in an April 2018 poll that people “…want see themselves as fiscally responsible, to some degree.” Even Americans who admit that they are spending more than they earn over the past several months are more likely to claim this is only temporary, rather than their normal. Those who say they are spending less believe it is permanent, despite what the numbers reveal.

    And Americans’ have a predilection to say that they enjoy saving more than spending, which rose dramatically between the period before and the period just after the recession, has remained in place, even as the economy has improved.

    Positive Cash Flow

    Asked about their spending habits, Gallup results show that Americans are as likely to say they are spending the same amount as they used to (35%) as to say they are spending less (35%). Slightly fewer, 30%, report spending more. The takeaway is that Americans’ conspicuous spending habits will not change unless they first acknowledge it as a problem.

    On the other hand, most wealthy people understand and stress the importance of spending much less than their means. Spending less gives them financial freedom which then translates into various opportunities such as career mobility, flexibility to venture into activities outside of work, and of course the ability to increase their wealth.

    On the other hand, if Americans are spending more than what they earn, then even with a big six-figure income, they will be excessively reliant on each of their paycheck. It is very important that they are financially independent before the time comes when they decide to become self-employed or to retire. So it’s important to start saving, investing and accumulating wealth.

    Simply spending less than we earn, eliminating bad debt, managing taxes and fees, paying ourselves first, starting to save early, automatically saving and investing for the long-term, and developing smart financial habits and positive financial mindset will result in huge results over a long period of time.


    References:

    1. https://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/z1/20190307/z1.pdf
    2. https://usdebtclock.org
    3. https://news.gallup.com/poll/209432/americans-say-saving-spending.aspx
    4. https://www.bea.gov/news/glance

    10 Money Lessons He Wished Heard — or Listened to — When Younger | MarketWatch

    Updated: February 23, 2020

    Jonathan Clements, author of “From Here to Financial Happiness” and “How to Think About Money,” and editor of HumbleDollar.com., is the former personal-finance columnist for The Wall Street Journal. He has devoted his entire adult life to learning about money.

    That might sound like cruel-and-unusual punishment, but he has mostly enjoyed it. For more than three decades, he has spent his days perusing the business pages, reading finance books, scanning academic studies and talking to countless folks about their finances.

    Yet, despite this intense financial education, it took him a decade or more to learn many of life’s most important money lessons and, indeed, some key insights have only come to him in recent years.

    Here are 10 things he wished he’d been told in his 20s—or told more loudly, so he actually listened:

    — Read on www.marketwatch.com/story/10-money-lessons-i-wish-id-listened-to-when-i-was-younger-2020-02-12

    1. A small home is the key to a big portfolio. Financially, it turned out to be one of the smartest things he had ever done, because it allowed him to save great gobs of money. That’s clear to him in retrospect. But he wished he’d known it was a smart move at the time, because he wouldn’t have wasted so many hours wondering whether he should have bought a larger place.

    2. Debts are negative bonds. From his first month as a homeowner, he sent in extra money with his mortgage payment, so he could pay off the loan more quickly. But it was only later that he came to view his mortgage as a negative bond—one that was costing him dearly. Indeed, paying off debt almost always garners a higher after-tax return than you can earn by investing in high-quality bonds.

    3. Watching the market and your portfolio doesn’t improve performance. This has been another huge time waster. It’s a bad habit he belatedly trying to break.

    4. Thirty years from now, you’ll wish you’d invested more in stocks. Yes, over five or even 10 years, there’s some chance you’ll lose money in the stock market. But over 30 years? It’s highly likely you’ll notch handsome gains, especially if you’re broadly diversified and regularly adding new money to your portfolio in good times and bad.

    5. Nobody knows squat about short-term investment performance. One of the downsides of following the financial news is that you hear all kinds of smart, articulate experts offering eloquent predictions of plummeting share prices and skyrocketing interest rates that—needless to say—turn out to be hopelessly, pathetically wrong. In his early days as an investor, this was, alas, the sort of garbage that would give him pause.

    6. Put retirement first. Buying a house or sending your kids to college shouldn’t be your top goal. Instead, retirement should be. It’s so expensive to retire that, if you don’t save at least a modest sum in your 20s, the math quickly becomes awfully tough—and you’ll need a huge savings rate to amass the nest egg you need.

    7. You’ll end up treasuring almost nothing you buy. Over the years, he had had fleeting desires for all kinds of material goods. Most of the stuff he purchased has since been thrown away. This is an area where millennials seem far wiser than us baby boomers. They’re much more focused on experiences than possessions—a wise use of money, says happiness research.

    8. Work is so much more enjoyable when you work for yourself. These days, he earn just a fraction of what he made during my six years on Wall Street, but he is having so much more fun. No meetings to attend. No employee reviews. No worries about getting to the office on time or leaving too early. he is working harder today than he ever have. But it doesn’t feel like work—because it’s his choice and it’s work he is passionate about.

    9. Will our future self approve? As we make decisions today, he think this is a hugely powerful question to ask—and yet it’s only in recent years that he had learned to ask it.

    When we opt not to save today, we’re expecting our future self to make up the shortfall. When we take on debt, we’re expecting our future self to repay the money borrowed. When we buy things today of lasting value, we’re expecting our future self to like what we purchase.

    Pondering our future self doesn’t just improve financial decisions. It can also help us to make smarter choices about eating, drinking, exercising and more.

    10. Relax, things will work out. As he watch his son, daughter and son-in-law wrestle with early adult life, he glimpse some of the anxiety that he suffered in my 20s and 30s.

    When you’re starting out, there’s so much uncertainty — what sort of career you’ll have, how financial markets will perform, what misfortunes will befall you. And there will be misfortunes. he’d had my fair share.

    But if you regularly take the right steps—work hard, save part of every paycheck, resist the siren song of get-rich-quick schemes—good things should happen. It isn’t guaranteed. But it’s highly likely. So, for goodness’ sake, fret less about the distant future, and focus more on doing the right things each and every day.

    You can follow Jonathan Clements on Twitter @ClementsMoney and on Facebook at Jonathan Clements Money Guide.

    Schwab Sector Views: New Sector Ratings for the New Year | Charles Schwab

    By Schwab Center for Financial Research

    Macro environment:  Rising stocks and Treasury yields, fading U.S. dollar

    We [Charles Schwab] continue to see a gap between the health of the manufacturing sector and that of the services sector and consumers. Despite recent U.S.-China trade war de-escalation, manufacturing activity remains under strain from ongoing tariffs, new tariff threats and still-elevated trade policy uncertainty, combined with slow global growth. On the other hand, the services sector continues to thrive amid strong consumer confidence and consumption, in large part due to a strong job market. 

    While economic momentum overall has slowed, we do see signs of stabilization in both the United States and abroad. Accommodative monetary (central bank) and fiscal (tax cuts and government spending) policies have provided a strong tailwind for the global economy.

    The signing of a “phase-one” trade deal between the U.S. and China, combined with congressional passage of the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada (USMCA) trade pact, have eased some trade uncertainty. Amid this apparent global economic revitalization and shrinking trade risk, Treasury bond yields have risen, the value of U.S. dollar has declined and U.S. stocks have advanced to record highs.

    However, geopolitical risks—while reduced somewhat—remain elevated, and equity valuations are high. Given this combination, we think bouts of increased volatility and more frequent pullbacks are possible. This doesn’t necessarily mean the rally won’t keep going—it’s likely the strong momentum in stocks may continue until there is a catalyst sufficient to deflate the current extremely bullish investor sentiment—but the risks need to be considered.

    — Read on www.schwab.com/resource-center/insights/content/sector-views

    Schwab Sector Views: New Sector Ratings for the New Year | Charles Schwab

    Macro environment:  Rising stocks and Treasury yields, fading U.S. dollar

    We continue to see a gap between the health of the manufacturing sector and that of the services sector and consumers. Despite recent U.S.-China trade war de-escalation, manufacturing activity remains under strain from ongoing tariffs, new tariff threats and still-elevated trade policy uncertainty, combined with slow global growth. On the other hand, the services sector continues to thrive amid strong consumer confidence and consumption, in large part due to a strong job market. 

    While economic momentum overall has slowed, we do see signs of stabilization in both the United States and abroad. Accommodative monetary (central bank) and fiscal (tax cuts and government spending) policies have provided a strong tailwind for the global economy. The signing of a “phase-one” trade deal between the U.S. and China, combined with congressional passage of the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada (USMCA) trade pact, have eased some trade uncertainty. Amid this apparent global economic revitalization and shrinking trade risk, Treasury bond yields have risen, the value of U.S. dollar has declined and U.S. stocks have advanced to record highs.

    However, geopolitical risks—while reduced somewhat—remain elevated, and equity valuations are high. Given this combination, we think bouts of increased volatility and more frequent pullbacks are possible. This doesn’t necessarily mean the rally won’t keep going—it’s likely the strong momentum in stocks may continue until there is a catalyst sufficient to deflate the current extremely bullish investor sentiment—but the risks need to be considered.
    — Read on www.schwab.com/resource-center/insights/content/sector-views

    A Man is What He Thinks

    “A man is literally what he thinks.” James Allen

    James Allen, a British philosophical author of ‘As a Man Thinketh’, wrote, “A man is literally what he thinks, his character being the complete sum of all his thoughts. As the plant springs from, so every act of a man springs from the hidden seeds of thought, and could not have appeared without them.”

    The things you choose to focus on, your thoughts, determines how you perceive the world – and influences many of the experiences you have as a result. If you focus only on the negative things in your world, the world can seem like a terrible place and your mood and outlook may suffer.

    “Every one of us is the sum total of our own thoughts. We are where we are because that is exactly where we really want or feel we deserve to be, whether we’ll admit it or not.” Earl Nightingale

    But when you focus on the positive things in your world, you see that the world is actually full of faith, hope, love, and joy. There is kindness and beauty that inspires people to do incredible things.  Each man holds the key to their own perception and focus, good or bad. He also hold the key to everything that enters into his life. By working patiently and intelligently upon his thoughts and focus, he may remake his life, his behaviors and transform his circumstances. 

    “You are today where your thoughts have brought you; you will be tomorrow where your thoughts take you.” James Allen

    Thoughts of doubt and fear never accomplished anything, and never can. They always lead to failure. Purpose, energy, power to do, and all strong thoughts cease when doubt and fear creep in.

    “He who has conquered doubt and fear has conquered failure.James Allen

    The will to do springs from the knowledge that we can do. Doubt and fear are the great enemies of faith and knowledge. The people who embrace readily doubt and fear, who refuses to slay them, hinder himself at every step.

    Changing the Subconscious Mind

    Daily affirmations are techniques you use to begin he process of improving your life. Affirmations are simply statements that describe a goal or thought in its already completed state. Positive affirmation helps eliminate negative and limiting beliefs.

    Affirmations can transform an individual’s comfort zone from a limited one keeping them trapped in mediocrity to a more expanded one where anything is possible. It helps to replace your “I can’ts” with “I cans,” and your fears and doubts with confidence and aspirations.

    Affirmations are reminders to your unconscious mind to stay focused on your goals and to come up with solutions to challenges and obstacles that might get in the way.

    “These things we bring on ourselves through our habitual way of thinking,”

    Daily affirmations are simple, positive statements declaring specific goals in their completed states. Affirmations also hold a key to creating the life of your dreams. Successful people have long known that using willpower alone to energize their success isn’t enough.

    Let go of negative beliefs

    It is important to let go of and not focus on negative thoughts and images. Instead, individuals should bombard their subconscious mind with new thoughts and images that are positive and stated in the present tense.

    In closing, William James said: “The greatest discovery of my generation is that human beings can alter their lives by altering their attitudes of mind. We need only in cold blood act as if the thing in question were real, and it will become infallibly real by growing into such a connection with our life that it will become real. It will become so knit with habit and emotion that our interests in it will be those which characterize belief.”

    James also said,

    ”If you only care enough for a result, you will almost certainly attain it. If you wish to be rich, you will be rich. If you wish to be learned, you will be learned. If you wish to be good, you will be good – only you must, then, really wish these things, and wish them exclusively, and not wish at the same time a hundred other incompatible things just as strongly.”


    References:

    1. Allen, James, As a Man Thinketh: Original 1902 Edition
    2. http://www.jamesallenlibrary.com/authors/james-allen/as-a-man-thinketh
    3. https://www.jackcanfield.com/blog/practice-daily-affirmations/
    4. https://www.jackcanfield.com/blog/become-a-millionaire-never-too-late/

    AT&T CEO Interview on CNBC Squawk Box

    Friday morning from the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, CNBC Squawk Box co-anchors Joe Kernen and Becky Quick interviewed AT&T CEO and Chairman, Randall Stephenson.

    In this far ranging early morning interview, Randall discussed the current and future outlook of the large cap communications and entertainment company he leads.  Effectively, he stated that he was very bullish on the projected economic output in 2020 for the company.

    He stressed that the top priority for the AT&T was to pay down the massive debt incurred from its acquisition of Time Warner.  He commented that the goal was to bring down debt to a ratio of 2.5X debt-to-EBITDA and this past year, they successfully paid off $30 billion in debt.  Additionally, Randall shared that AT&T realized a 45% total shareholder return in calendar year 2019.

    Media Business

    Overall, he commented that AT&T’s media business, renamed Warner Entertainment, is doing well.  In the short term, they expect to roll-out HBO Max in May 2020 which will feature Warner Bros. extensive inventory of content, including the TV series “Friends” and “The Big Bang Theory”. and content from Turner’s networks.

    Currently, premium HBO streaming has approximately 30 million subscribers.  Those subscribers will automatically convert to HBO Max once the it comes on-line. He expects that HBO Max will grow to 50 million subscribers.

    Financials

    Activist shareholder, Elliot Management, bought a large stake in AT&T back in September 2019 and criticized the management and board leadership, and the direction of the company.  Elliot Management in a letter wrote that AT&T’s stock could potentially surge to above $60 a share by 2021 if the company “increased strategic focus, improved operational efficiency” and “enhanced leadership and oversight.”

    Furthermore, Elliot Management questioned the company’s succession plan of tagging Warner Media’s CEO and AT&T COO, John Stankey, as CEO Randall Stephenson’s heir apparent.  They expressed concerns with Stankey’s decision making. his lack of experience operating and communications and entertainment company, and his ability to manage the conglomerate.

    Bottom line is AT&T’s financial future appears highly dependent on the success of HBO Max growing paid subscriptions, management paying down the high level of corporate debt on its balance sheet, and developing a coherent strategy that can effectively discover and employ the synergies of AT&T’s diverse assets and enterprises.


    Sources:  https://www.cnbc.com/2020/02/07/att-ceo-randall-stephenson-on-promise-to-remain-ceo-through-2020.html?&qsearchterm=randall%20stephenson