Family Office
U Miami offers course in wealth-management basics

Program crafted to help attendees work more effectively with
their advisors. The University of Miami is offering an
unaccredited night-school course in wealth management for
high-net-worth consumers.
The two-session "Preserving and Transferring Wealth" program aims
to give individuals and families with at least $2 million a
better understanding of personal wealth management "so they can
learn how to ask their financial advisors the proper questions
and to ensure that their goals of financial sustainability are
being properly pursued," according to a University of Miami
statement.
A vow
The first session focuses on maintaining a disciplined investment
approach that is in line with one's own risk tolerance and
objectives. The second session focuses on making sure that the
greatest amount of an estate passes to the estate owner's
intended beneficiaries.
The non-degree program was created by former Morgan Stanley
broker Andrew Menachem, whose views on wealth management were
shaped by personal experience. In his early twenties, Menachem
lost his father and had to take charge of his family's financial
affairs. The difficulties associated with this inspired him to
make it his life work to help others reach their financial
goals.
"I made a vow that I would educate anyone who would listen so
they wouldn't have to go through the pain, confusion and errors
that my family went through," says Menachem, who conducts the
sessions at the University of Miami's Coral Gables, Fla.,
campus.
The course combines investment strategy with estate planning in
order to bridge financial goals across many generations,
according to the University of Miami's description of the
continuing-education course. It was not designed for people
"looking to find the 'hot stock of the day' or for day traders,"
the university adds in its course calendar. -FWR
.