Finance
Weekly Numerology Horoscope, Oct 27 – Nov 2: Luck, love & finance decoded
Number 1: (People born on 1, 10, 19, and 28 of any month)
Ganesha says to stay organized and maintain good communication with colleagues and customers to gain cooperation. Remember, calculated risks can improve your professional life. It is most important to manage your financial situation this week. Evaluate your current financial situation and establish clear goals for the short and long term. Create a reasonable budget that allows you to meet your essential expenses while saving for the future. Consider seeking expert financial advice or exploring investment opportunities to improve your financial portfolio. Be disciplined with your spending habits and remember that small changes can gradually lead to substantial financial growth. In matters of the heart, this week offers an opportunity to strengthen existing relationships and foster new ones.
Number 2: (People born on 2, 11, 20, and 29 of any month)
Ganesha says whether you’re starting a new project or trying to get better at your job, this is the perfect time to set clear goals and make a plan. It may also be a good idea for you to work well with your colleagues and talk to them effectively. Don’t be afraid of new challenges, meet new people in your professional network, and show that you are good at what you do. This week can provide immense potential for career growth and recognition. It’s a good idea to be careful with your money this week. Take a close look at how you’re spending and make some changes if necessary to stay on the right financial track. Look for opportunities to save your money and invest it wisely so you can achieve financial security in the long run.
Number 3: (People born on 3, 12, 21, and 30 of any month)
Ganesha says to keep your focus on personal and professional development, as expanding your skills can lead to long-term success. Have confidence in your abilities, and believe that your efforts will yield positive results. From a financial point of view, there is a need to make careful decisions this week. Assess your current financial situation, establish a budget, and prioritize your needs over wants. It is essential to take a more proactive approach towards your financial goals. Look for opportunities to cut down on unnecessary expenses and save for future endeavors. Keeping an eye on your financial situation will pave the way for stability and security in the long run. In terms of love, this week is going to be full of harmony and growth. If you are in a committed relationship, open communication and mutual understanding will be important.
Number 4: (People born on 4, 13, 22, and 31 of any month)
Ganesha says to stand out from the crowd and utilize career opportunities, it is important to be proactive and show leadership qualities. Working well with others and communicating effectively will help you achieve your goals and create a good work environment. Your financial situation looks stable this week, so it is a good time to make finance-related decisions. This is the right time to think about how you are spending your money. You need to create a budget that is in line with your long-term goals. By being careful with your finances and planning wisely, you can work on improving your financial situation. It can also be a good idea to take advantage of investment opportunities after doing proper research and taking advice from experts to improve your financial future.
Number 5: (People born on 5, 14, and 23 of any month)
Ganesha says it’s also important to think about your finances during the week. Look at what you’re spending and figure out where you can make changes for the better. Consider creating a budget or reviewing one that you can use wisely during the week. This week is a good time for love and strengthening your relationships. Whether you’re single or in a committed relationship, it’s important to focus on your emotional connections with the people you care about. Try to improve your communication and show your affection to those close to you. By embracing the changing nature of life, you will be well on your way to a fulfilling and successful week ahead.
Number 6: (People born on 6, 15, and 24 of any month)
Ganesha says you can also be more productive by organizing your work area, focusing on your tasks, and managing your time better. In terms of finances, it is important to keep a good balance this week. Think about your current financial situation and make clear goals to improve it. Create a budget that matches your goals, such as saving for a large purchase, paying off debt, or investing for the future. Find ways to cut down on unnecessary spending and be more careful with your money. This might include looking for better deals, cooking at home, or reconsidering subscription services. Focus on your relationships and matters of the heart. Love and relationships require your time, care, and open communication.
Number 7 (People born on 7, 16, and 25 of any month)
Ganesha says it is important to plan for various parameters of life in this combined week. This week will bring a variety of experiences that will impact your personal life, business, finance, and love life. Let’s take a closer look at each area and try to take away the main takeaways of the week. In this heavily raced world, it is important to make time for your personal life, which includes nurturing relationships and keeping your secrets. This week, set aside some time to stock up on good times and create lasting memories for your loved ones, be it family or friends. To strengthen your social integration, promote your universal well-being, and provide valuable support, especially during your cooperation time. This week has brought an opportunity for you to take a step forward in your professional journey. Focus on the goals of your venture, find a few, and make a plan, as well as create level steps to reach them. Be on the lookout for opportunities to collaborate with enterprises, starting with new skills training, mentorship, and making the most of growth opportunities within your organization.
Number 8: (People born on 8, 17, and 26 of any month)
Ganesha says at the beginning of the new week, you need to stock up and prepare. There may be changes in your personal life, business, finance, and love life during the week. So let us revive ourselves and get ready for the journey ahead. This week you may feel a sense of balance and peace in your personal life. You can focus more on yourself and your relationship. Take some time to think about your life and buy more things you like. Pay attention to your mental and physical health and deliver your presentation even if you don’t have everything you need. You work with people to lay the infrastructure and build a strong support system over time, which can bring you great joy. Your performance in professional life is likely to be good this week. If you are working on a project or looking for new opportunities, your hard work will bear fruit. Don’t be afraid of dissenting opinions and different thinking. Working well with documents and communicating effectively will help you reach your goals. This week is a chance to embrace your skills and knowledge, so be prepared for any opportunities that come your way.
Number 9: (People born on 9, 18, and 27 of any month)
Ganesha says this week will be full of stamina for you. Welcome all opportunities to feel balance and joy in your personal life, finances, finances, and balance. Devote your time and effort to each area, this way you can pave the way for an individual and successful week. Start each day with a clear plan and strong willpower. It is very important to focus on personal development to achieve complete success this week. This is a great time to meet new people, read, take online courses, or gain new skills. This week, maintaining achievable goals and keeping track of your progress will help keep you motivated and stable. If you’re willing to leave your comfort zone behind and embrace growth, you’ll learn more about yourself and change for the better during this period. Invest your time and efforts in your profession. Your hard work and sketch will bring you historically positive results. Also, focus on your growth as a person while making important decisions based on your principles.
– Ends
Finance
The Impact of Financial Advisors Since the Uptick in Policy Risk – Center for Retirement Research
The brief’s key findings are:
- Our recent survey research found that older investors are more concerned about their financial future due to greater uncertainty over federal policy.
- This new analysis explores whether financial advisors can help them cope.
- Advisors are broadly more optimistic than investors on the economy and on how policy actions might impact financial security.
- But on the specifics, advisors express concern over Social Security, Medicare, federal debt, and inflation, with many urging precautionary actions.
- This ambivalence may help explain why advisors have no significant impact on their clients’ views on the future or investment strategy.
Introduction
Planning for retirement has always been hard, because people face numerous risks – including outliving their money (longevity risk), investment losses (market risk), unexpected health expenses (health risk), and the erosive impact of rapidly rising prices (inflation risk). Further complicating such planning are possible shifts in the public policy environment: changes to social insurance programs can undermine the foundations of a retirement plan; changes to the tax system can scramble a household’s finances; and a ballooning government debt can increase interest rates and slow the economy. The level of policy risk seems to have increased dramatically since the start of 2025, so the question is how the recent uptick may be affecting the decisions and behavior of near-retirees and retirees.
This brief is the second of two drawn from a recent study on the potential impact of policy risk on planning for retirement.1 The first addressed that question by combining a summary of the academic literature on the nature and effects of policy risk with a new survey of the changes in the views and actions of near-retiree and retiree investors since the start of 2025. This second brief adds the results of a companion survey of financial advisors, which provides information about what advisors are thinking regarding the uptick of policy risk in 2025 and what advice they are providing their older clients.
The discussion proceeds as follows. For background, the first section provides the major findings from the first brief. The literature review establishes that increased policy risk both harms the economy and burdens individuals. And the survey of near retirees and retirees indicates that older Americans are keenly aware of the increase in policy uncertainty and are taking defensive responses. The second section describes the 2025 Survey of Financial Advisors and presents the results. The final section concludes that, while older investors are worried and taking steps, financial advisors are ambivalent. This group retains a generally positive view of the economy despite recent developments, yet harbors some specific concerns. This ambivalence may explain why advisors have no impact on their clients’ views on the financial future or on investment decisions.
Policy Uncertainty and Response of Households
To be clear, “policy risk” is not about policy change, per se, but rather about the unpredictability of future policy. Even without any change to current policy, for example, a tight and polarized election forces households to consider a wider range of policies than if the election outcome were certain or the policy positions of the candidates were similar.
Major Findings from the Literature
Researchers have used an array of techniques to measure the level of policy risk and its impact. The most common approach is textual analysis of media coverage for terms associated with policy risk.2 But other approaches include looking at the impact of actual variability in policy parameters, estimating the impact of tight elections, and using surveys to gauge household perceptions of policy uncertainty and their likely responses.
The effects of policy uncertainty on the economy are broadly negative. In terms of the macroeconomy, uncertainty depresses economic activity, increases stock-market volatility, and reduces returns.3 Similarly, unemployment is found to rise in the face of greater uncertainty, while consumption and investment tend to fall.4
For those approaching retirement and retirees, the most salient risks are related to Social Security, Medicare, and fiscal policy (e.g., the federal debt and tariffs). In terms of Social Security, the big question is how policymakers will address the projected exhaustion of assets in the retirement trust fund in 2033 – raise payroll taxes by 4 percent, cut benefits by 23 percent, or some combination of the two. With regard to Medicare, while its finances are generally structurally sound, the issue is whether policymakers will continue to tolerate the program’s growing costs, which create an ever-increasing drain on federal revenues, or cut the program by raising either premiums or copayments. In terms of the ballooning federal debt, the risks are rapidly rising interest rates on Treasury securities, which cascade through to other forms of borrowing, and/or a major increase in taxes or a decline in spending.
As individuals take precautionary steps to protect themselves against policy risks, studies have shown that scaring people to take actions that they would not have taken in a stable environment has real costs. In the context of fixing Social Security, for example, researchers have found that individuals would be willing to forgo as much as 6 percent of expected benefits or 2.5 months of earnings to resolve the uncertainty.5
Results from the 2025 Retirement Investor Survey
The survey of near-retirees and retirees was conducted by Greenwald Research between July 7 and July 31, 2025. The sample consisted of 1,443 individuals ages 45-79 with over $100,000 in investable assets.
Throughout 2025, policy changed in drastic ways, and long-term trends in Medicare and Social Security financing have become more concerning. New deficits added to the already huge federal debt, and tariffs became a major source of anxiety. Not surprisingly, survey respondents have dramatically increased their consumption of media on these issues (see Figure 1).
It should therefore come as no surprise that near-retirees and retirees in the 2025 survey expressed concern about the direction and unpredictability of federal policy. Investors’ concerns for their financial future mounted (39 percent say concern increased versus 15 percent who say it decreased), while their confidence that federal policy will benefit Americans declined (61 percent decreased versus 26 percent increased, see Figure 2).

These older investors have already reacted to this unpredictability in several ways (see Figure 3). For example, 21 percent of the unretired respondents in the sample have decided to postpone their retirements. And, on the financial side, 28 percent of the entire group have increased the amount in their emergency fund, and 33 percent have shifted to more conservative investments.
In short, the evidence shows that older Americans are keenly aware of the increase in policy uncertainty and are taking defensive responses.
How Do Financial Advisors Differ from Investors and What Role Can They Play?
One group that could help older Americans cope with the heightened level of policy uncertainty is their financial advisors. To find out what advisors are thinking and what advice they are offering, the second survey interviewed 400 financial professionals. Each professional was required to have at least 75 clients, at least three years of experience at their current firm, and to manage over $30 million in assets. Furthermore, at least 40 percent of their clients must be 50 or older, and at least half their income must be derived from financial products or planning. These advisors represented a cross section of firms, including broker-dealers, registered investment advisors, insurance companies, banks, and full-service financial services firms.
The advisor survey reveals a different view of the retirement landscape and its susceptibility to policy risk than the investor survey, but also a nuanced one. On the one hand, advisors have a much rosier view of the economy in general. In particular, while 53 percent of near-retirees and retirees say the economy deteriorated between 2024 and early 2025 and only 26 percent say it improved, the numbers for advisors are nearly flipped, with 47 percent saying the state of the economy improved and only 25 percent saying it weakened (see Figure 4).
And while investors say the government’s future actions will weaken their financial security by a nearly two-to-one margin (47 percent versus 24 percent, see Figure 5), the views of advisors are again very different. Only 31 percent of advisors believe the government will weaken their clients’ finances, while 36 percent believe government actions will be positive.
On the other hand, even advisors seem to be recommending greater caution in response to the turbulent environment in 2025. In particular, 22 percent have recommended that their clients increase emergency savings since the beginning of 2025, as opposed to 3 percent recommending a decrease (75 percent recommend no change, see Figure 6). And the amount of attention advisors pay to political and policy issues has also increased since 2024 – 54 percent say they pay more attention to these topics than last year, as compared with 5 percent saying the opposite. Advisors’ level of concern about their own clients’ financial future also reveals their general unease: 28 percent say they are more concerned about their clients’ financial future in 2025 versus 2024, while only 9 percent say they are less concerned.
The advisors’ positive outlook for retirement is also somewhat contradicted by their concern regarding specific policy risks. Figure 7 shows that advisors are worried or very worried about a variety of risks. In fact, 63 percent report being worried about a major decline in the stock market, 65 percent are worried about a cut in Social Security benefits, and 79 percent about high inflation. Figure 7 also shows investor responses where the questions were similar to those for advisors. Notably, clients rank these risks quite similarly, but are almost uniformly more worried in absolute levels. Interestingly, both investors and advisors consider the federal debt to be the most concerning of the different topics.
The underlying pessimism of advisors beneath their overall positive sheen has some specific implications. While the vast majority of advisors either do not recommend a retirement age to their clients or did not change their recommendations between 2024 and 2025, 11 percent advised a later retirement age. Only 1 percent shifted in favor of earlier retirement (see Figure 8).
Moreover, the vast majority of advisors have recommended that their clients take precautionary actions in light of anticipated policy changes (see Figure 9). In particular, 21 percent have suggested cutting back spending; 49 percent have suggested changes to investments; 43 percent have suggested acquiring financial products to hedge investment losses; and 42 percent have suggested reallocation of resources, such as Roth conversions, based on the projection of higher future taxes. Only 21 percent have not recommended any of the above actions.
Of those advisors who recommended changes in investment strategies in 2025 relative to 2024, most suggested a more conservative allocation. Twenty-five percent chose that option, relative to 18 percent who recommended a more aggressive strategy (with 21 percent suggesting a mix and 36 percent suggesting no change; see Figure 10).
When asked about their personal investments, 29 percent of advisors say that the importance of protecting their assets has increased since 2024, while only 4 percent say that the need to protect assets has become less important, with 66 percent saying their views have not changed (see Figure 11).
Overall, the pattern of responses from advisors paints a picture of frothy optimism at a high level, coupled with fundamental concern about the implications of policy on financial security. When asked in any great detail about specific policies or about the appropriate posture to strike between conservative and aggressive investment behavior, the advisors generally display an increased preference for safety as opposed to chasing returns. Putting on a brave face despite underlying concerns may be a response to clients’ need for reassurance.
The ambivalence in advisors’ views may help explain why they do not appear to have much impact on their clients. Regression results show that the correlations between having a financial advisor, on the one hand, and the change in investors’ concern for either their investments or their financial future, on the other, are statistically insignificant in both cases (see Figure 12).
Conclusion
While policy uncertainty has been much studied, big questions remain about the impact of the apparent dramatic uptick in policy risk. Our first brief on this topic showed that near-retiree and retiree investors have grown significantly more concerned about their financial well-being since the start of 2025. Even for this sample of relatively wealthy households, the potential for substantial cuts in Social Security was the major concern. In response to these risks, a meaningful share of these groups have taken steps to protect themselves, such as increasing their emergency fund and moving to more conservative investments, and those still working have delayed their retirement date.
One resource that could help older Americans cope with the heightened level of policy uncertainty is their financial advisors. Advisors, however, seem conflicted. They are generally optimistic about the economy overall, with 47 percent saying they think that the economy is stronger since the start of 2025, and only 25 percent reporting they think it is weaker. On the other hand, advisors express concern about a broad array of developments, and most of those recommending changes for their clients suggest cautious actions, such as delaying retirement or moving to more conservative investments. The ambivalence in advisors’ views may help explain why they do not appear to have much impact on their clients’ confidence. The correlations between having a financial advisor, on the one hand, and the change in investors’ concern for either their investments or their financial future, on the other, are statistically insignificant in both cases.
References
Alexopolous, Michelle and Jon Cohen. 2015. “The Power of Print: Uncertainty Shocks, Markets, and the Economy.” International Review of Economics & Finance 40: 8-28.
Baker, Scott R., Nichola Bloom, and Steven J. Davis. 2016. “Measuring Economic Policy Uncertainty.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 131(4): 1593-1636.
Boudoukh, Jacob, Ronen Feldman, Shimon Kogan, and Matthew Richardson. 2013. “Which News Moves Stock Prices? A Textual Analysis.” Working Paper 18725. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.
Fernandez-Villaverde, Jesus, Pablo Guerron-Quintana, Keith Kuester, and Juan Rubio-Ramirez. 2015. “Fiscal Volatility Shocks and Economic Activity.” American Economic Review 105(11): 3352-3384.
Leduc, Sylvain and Zheng Liu. 2016. “Uncertainty Shocks are Aggregate Demand Shocks.” Journal of Monetary Economics 82: 20-35.
Luttmer, Erzo F.P. and Andrew A. Samwick. 2018. “The Welfare Cost of Perceived Policy Uncertainty: Evidence from Social Security.” American Economic Review 108(2): 275-307.
Munnell, Alicia H. and Gal Wettstein. 2026. “How Policy Risks Affect Retirement Planning.” Special Report. Chestnut Hill, MA: Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.
Shoven, John B., Sita Slavov, and John G. Watson. 2021. “How Does Social Security Reform Indecision Affect Younger Cohorts?” Working Paper 28850. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.
Endnotes
Finance
Benin's finance minister Wadagni wins presidential election with 94% landslide
Finance
Financial Literacy Month aims to educate about smart money habits
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WSFA) – April is Financial Literacy Month to raise public awareness of the importance of smart money management habits. The goal of this month is make sure everyone has the knowledge and skills needed to make informed financial decisions.
Whether you’re just beginning your financial journey or already managing your budget, savings, and investments, this month is designed to strengthen your financial foundation, and help you understand how small changes today can lead to long-term financial success.
Studies show that financial literacy is directly linked to higher savings rates, lower levels of high-interest debt, and better financial decision-making.
But financial education remains inconsistent across the country. Personal finance is a leading cause of stress in relationships, and many young adults graduate without the financial skills they need to manage credit, debt, and savings. So, improving financial literacy can lead to greater financial stability and long-term success.
Creating greater financial wellness is a key component of Regions Bank’s community engagement strategy.
Regions provides easily accessible, no-cost financial education courses to anyone, whether they’re a Regions customer or not, with customized tools, online resources, webinars, podcasts and in-person sessions covering topics ranging from budgeting, to saving and understanding credit, to insights for small-business owners, college students and people planning for retirement — and every life event and milestone in between. Find more about Regions Next Step on the bank’s website.
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