Due to over-regulation in the Financial Planning Sector most CFP (Certified Financial Planners) cannot afford to take clients who have less than $500,000 in net worth. This now leaves a huge gap in the market and means most in the Middle Class are left in the cold. The following article will lead us through the theme Will artificial intelligence pricing software companies market markers?
Once the data has been captured and arranged in this way, through a process known as "Extract, Transformation, and Load" (ETL), it can be passed through a further stage of processing that generates a "Cube." The Cube, in this context, is another highly optimized form of storage in which the Dimensionally Modelled data can be pre-aggregated and cross-mapped for efficient retrieval and presentation to the user, who can enjoy parsing data at many levels of summarization moving quickly between almost limitless varieties of analysis.
You see, even if these false intelligent RoboAdvisors only deal with low net worth people, the sheer volume will add up to trillions of dollars of investment and annual growth. These RoboAdvisors AI machines will inadvertently become market makers as they invest in various companies. This new investment in bonds will lift some bonds that don't deserve to elevated, driving prices up into bubble territory.
Employing yet other tools to perform sophisticated analyses, whereby trends and anomalies buried deep in the data may be discovered, understood and exploited (a technique called "Data Mining"). Data mining models are created and refined to become sensitive to and resonant with the data patterns and can themselves be used to generate forecasts of future trends and movements within the tracked data.
Consider if you will the challenges with high-frequency trading and all the havoc those AI run algorithms have caused; flash crashes, stock market stop gaps, and torched corporate shareholder equity in minutes. Will RoboAdvisors give us more of the same? No, it will be a slow bubble build, but they will distort the market.
Why did all this happen? It started with over-regulation, do-gooder regulators, Wall Street lobbyists, and wire house fraudulent practices over time. The problem now is the overkill and overstepping the bounds of financial market regulations has caused future challenges. No, that's not unexpected either, we've watched government regulators do dumb things in the past and the law of unintended consequences results - that is all too common.
Early in the eighteenth century, inventors were making discoveries about heat, energy, and motion. There rapidly changed steam-driven locomotion (railways) and driving locomotives and giant control plants for making every machine in a sweatshop turn and churn ceaselessly. Spinning cotton, weaving cloth, cutting and shaping iron and then steel. The Industrial Revolution was born. Mills and factories sprung up all across the coal-rich fields of Northern England (this writer's birthplace - although a little later).
Yes, the big banks want a piece of the financial advisor sector, and they have lots of low net worth customers who they rake over the coal with fees, but killing the human kind of advisor for a RoboAdvisor isn't helping anyone, it's just killing more jobs and giving consumers fewer choices, all the while distorting markets - dumb. Meanwhile, as I pinned this article, I received an email news alert from our local county Economic Development Council - we lost 100 jobs in the category of financial advisors in the last quarter, and mind you that's only our little county with less than 1-million in population.
Once the data has been captured and arranged in this way, through a process known as "Extract, Transformation, and Load" (ETL), it can be passed through a further stage of processing that generates a "Cube." The Cube, in this context, is another highly optimized form of storage in which the Dimensionally Modelled data can be pre-aggregated and cross-mapped for efficient retrieval and presentation to the user, who can enjoy parsing data at many levels of summarization moving quickly between almost limitless varieties of analysis.
You see, even if these false intelligent RoboAdvisors only deal with low net worth people, the sheer volume will add up to trillions of dollars of investment and annual growth. These RoboAdvisors AI machines will inadvertently become market makers as they invest in various companies. This new investment in bonds will lift some bonds that don't deserve to elevated, driving prices up into bubble territory.
Employing yet other tools to perform sophisticated analyses, whereby trends and anomalies buried deep in the data may be discovered, understood and exploited (a technique called "Data Mining"). Data mining models are created and refined to become sensitive to and resonant with the data patterns and can themselves be used to generate forecasts of future trends and movements within the tracked data.
Consider if you will the challenges with high-frequency trading and all the havoc those AI run algorithms have caused; flash crashes, stock market stop gaps, and torched corporate shareholder equity in minutes. Will RoboAdvisors give us more of the same? No, it will be a slow bubble build, but they will distort the market.
Why did all this happen? It started with over-regulation, do-gooder regulators, Wall Street lobbyists, and wire house fraudulent practices over time. The problem now is the overkill and overstepping the bounds of financial market regulations has caused future challenges. No, that's not unexpected either, we've watched government regulators do dumb things in the past and the law of unintended consequences results - that is all too common.
Early in the eighteenth century, inventors were making discoveries about heat, energy, and motion. There rapidly changed steam-driven locomotion (railways) and driving locomotives and giant control plants for making every machine in a sweatshop turn and churn ceaselessly. Spinning cotton, weaving cloth, cutting and shaping iron and then steel. The Industrial Revolution was born. Mills and factories sprung up all across the coal-rich fields of Northern England (this writer's birthplace - although a little later).
Yes, the big banks want a piece of the financial advisor sector, and they have lots of low net worth customers who they rake over the coal with fees, but killing the human kind of advisor for a RoboAdvisor isn't helping anyone, it's just killing more jobs and giving consumers fewer choices, all the while distorting markets - dumb. Meanwhile, as I pinned this article, I received an email news alert from our local county Economic Development Council - we lost 100 jobs in the category of financial advisors in the last quarter, and mind you that's only our little county with less than 1-million in population.
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