(CFP) Certified Financial Planner Exam Questions part 3

A complete practice test to pass your (CFP) Certified Financial Planner Exam part 3

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(CFP) Certified Financial Planner Exam Questions part 3

What You Will Learn!

  • The benefits of having net worth or balance sheet data in one location
  • How to use the financial planning tools like a retirement planner
  • What the Personal Capital Software is and how it can be used
  • How to access and set up the free software
  • How to add non financial institution assets and liabilities to make the net worth or balance sheet more complete
  • How to use financial data to create an income statement

Description

CFP (Certified Financial Planner) Practice refers to the practical application of the knowledge and skills learned in the process of becoming a certified financial planner. It involves working with clients to develop a comprehensive financial plan that takes into account their goals, needs, and risk tolerance. A CFP practitioner must have a thorough understanding of financial planning principles, investment strategies, insurance, tax planning, retirement planning, and estate planning. They should also be skilled at communicating complex financial concepts in a clear and understandable manner to clients.

The Certified Financial Planner (CFP) designation is a professional certification mark for financial planners conferred by the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards (CFP Board)in the United States, and by 25 other organizations affiliated with Financial Planning Standards Board (FPSB),the international owner of the CFP mark outside of the United States.
To receive authorization to use the designation, the candidate must meet education, examination, experience and ethics requirements, and pay an ongoing certification fee.The information relates specifically to CFP certification in the United States.
In the United Kingdom, the CFP licence/designation is available to financial planners through membership of the Chartered Institute of Securities & Investment (CISI)

Personal Capital is currently a free software that can connect to financial institutions, pulling in financial asset and liability balances, as well as transaction detail, into one location.

The strong areas of benefit of using Personal Capital software are its ability to provide net worth or balance sheet information, investment management information, and planning tools such as retirement planning and other large planning goals.

The Personal Capital software also downloads transaction detail and allows for the categorization or assigning of accounts and tags that can then be used to generate an income statement. It also has budgeting tools to help with shorter-term cash flow management.

This course will discuss how to set up the Personal Capital software and link to accounts. We will also discuss some reasons why the software may be offered for free and look over Personal Capital data security.

We will compare the Personal Capital software to other types of software that can connect directly to financial institutions and pull financial information, such software generally falling into the category of accounting software that uses the double-entry accounting system or financial management software.

Accounting software using the double-entry accounting system includes packages such as QuickBooks, Xero, & Wave accounting. Although accounting software utilizes financial institution connectivity it generally does so differently than Personal Capital software, which falls into the financial management category. We will discuss the differences in software.

Other financial management and budgeting software include Quicken, Mint, and Microsoft Excel, Excel actually having a template called Money in Excel that has financial institution connectivity.

Learners will practice converting financial data into an income statement by downloading transactions from financial institutions, categorizing them, and then exporting them into Excel for sorting. We will compare the process with what would be done using accounting software like QuickBooks.

The course will discuss the benefits of the personal net worth or balance sheet functionality of Personal Capital software, the software pulling in assets and liability balances automatically for items such as bank accounts, investment accounts like 401(K), savings accounts, CD accounts, credit card balances, mortgage balances, and loan balances.

We will also discuss the benefit of the software providing more detail on our investment holdings and providing insights and suggestions to improve returns and reduce risk. The ability to pull investments into one place allows a more rounded analysis of the data than you may get from one brokerage account analyzed in isolation.

Learners will be able to use the projection planner to help plan for retirement and other large investment items. The Personal Capital software utilizes sophisticated analytical tools including a Monte Carlo Simulation tool.

We will also explore the home appraisal tool offered by the software and we will practice adding non-financial institution assets and liabilities, making our net worth or balance sheet completer and more accurate.

Who Should Attend!

  • Who wants to seat for (CFP) Certified Financial Planner Exam part 3

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Tags

  • Financial Planning

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