https://preservewm.com
We've been keeping up with the latest headlines...
here are two of our favorites worth sharing.
** Your Money
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When markets hit major milestones, bold predictions tend to follow. With the Dow recently crossing 50,000, it did not take long for forecasts of 100,000 to start circulating, sometimes on remarkably short timelines. Those projections often assume that recent returns represent a normal baseline rather than an outlier.
Reviewing the history of capital market norms can provide a useful reset. Long-term market growth has always come in cycles, shaped by starting conditions, earnings, interest rates, and valuation levels. Periods of exceptional returns are often followed by stretches where progress continues, but at a more measured pace.
Strong market returns usually reflect a favorable alignment of many conditions rather than any one thing. Recently, interest rates declined, valuations expanded, and earnings grew, creating a powerful backdrop for stock prices. Interest rates today are not high by historical standards, but the long period in which falling rates amplified returns has largely passed. Without the combined boost of declining rates and expanding valuations, future progress tends to depend more on earnings and income, and less on momentum alone.
This does not imply pessimism or stagnation. Markets can still grow, and long-term plans can still succeed. It does mean that expectations matter.
At PWM, we aim to build sustainable outcomes based on realistic assumptions, diversification, and patience, not on extrapolating the most recent chapter forward indefinitely. When predictions accelerate faster than fundamentals, slowing down is often the most rational response.
Capital Market Assumptions--A Toolkit for the Next Investing Regime (https://www.kkr.com/insights/capital-market-assumptions?utm_source=sfmc&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=1023061&utm_term=INST_Global_Capital_Markets_Assumptions_20260128&sfmc_id=514005242&subscriberkey=0035a00002fdvN3AAI&utm_id=1865679&utm_content=Readbanner)
source: KKR
** Your Life
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Longevity used to mean simply adding years. Increasingly, it means something more personal. Many people now define aging well as staying independent, maintaining energy, and continuing to do the things that matter most to them. That shift changes the conversation. Health becomes less about optimization and more about sustainability. Living well, on your own terms, is often a better benchmark than living longer by the calendar.
Living Well Matters More Than Living Longer (https://www.prnewswire.com/apac/news-releases/manulife-survey-reveals-hongkongers-new-perspective-on-longevityprioritizing-living-well-on-their-own-terms-over-simply-living-longer-302507809.html#:~:text=%22At%20Manulife%2C%20we%20recognize%20that,it%20as%20an%20evolving%20journey.%22&text=As%20individuals%20increasingly%20prioritize%20a,to%20declining%20mobility%20or%20disability.)
source: ManuLife
https://www.linkedin.com/in/danheth/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/rosalynn-harvey-heth-mpa-ceps-3a3aa3191/
** Complexity Simplified
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Most people overestimate what they can accomplish in a day because the brain plans as if time will be uninterrupted and energy will remain steady. In reality, decisions, transitions, and small interruptions consume far more capacity than expected. Tasks also expand to fill the attention they receive, creating the familiar sense of falling behind despite effort.
A simple counterweight is writing tasks down. A short, physical list forces prioritization, makes limits visible, and externalizes memory. The benefit is not productivity theater. It is reduced cognitive load and clearer expectations.
Stop Overloading the Wrong Part of Your Brain (https://hbr.org/2025/10/stop-overloading-the-wrong-part-of-your-brain-at-work)
by Amy Brann
** Trivia
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Last week's answer: Sorry, no animated film has ever won the Academy Award for Best Picture.
This week's question: What is the longest river that flows entirely within the United States?
https://youtu.be/uNPorZjHMbY?si=zVz5YnlaELzRD4SX
** Back in 1969, this song reached #1
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