Direct Indexes: Supercharge with Adhesion from Adhesion Wealth on Vimeo.
Once you're emulating an index with an optimized portfolio of individual stocks, why not emulate multiple indices using the same method . . . and then balance taxable implications across the top-level allocations? At that level, the tax impact stacks up faster. But to keep track of all the trades, you probably need to be running the money in a unified managed account (UMA) structure. Otherwise, you're just running a bunch of SMAs. That can be more efficient than ETFs from a tax perspective . . . but it still isn't tapping the ultimate potential of what direct indexing can actually do for your clients.More Articles
As Timely and Compelling as the Grammys: MUSQ, The Music ETF for the Global Music Industry
The music industry is projected to double in value by 2030, driven by streaming growth, superfan spending, and emerging-market adoption. MUSQ, The Global Music ETF, seeks to capture returns across the ecosystem—from Spotify and Tencent Music to Live Nation and Universal Music Group. Founder and CEO David Schulhof explains how advisors can use music industry exposure to differentiate portfolios while tapping into a sector with low correlation to traditional equity indexes.
Seeds: Direct Indexing Starts with Understanding the Client, Not the Capabilities
Direct indexing offers powerful capabilities—tax-loss harvesting, values-based screening, concentrated position management. But Zach Conway, CEO and Founder of Seeds, argues the conversation often stops at the advisor level. The client gets a pitch deck without clarity about how the solution fits their situation. Seeds aims to flip the script by starting with deep client understanding before determining which product solutions make sense. The framework helps advisors answer a simpler question: who should get direct indexing, and why?