Manly: Financial Planners And Advisors

Locating the right financial services provider in Manly isn't easy

You only need one financial planner, but it's great to have a choice of service providers.

The Sydney Financial Planners website matches you with three local financial planning advisors in Manly, Sydney to help guide you in making a decision on the best planning provider that meets your needs.

Find a financial adviser in 3 simple steps

  1. Answer a few questions that tell us a little bit about the service you are looking for
  2. Submit your contact information
  3. Contact the financial planning service providers we suggest, or wait for them to contact you.
There are 1709 financial planners in and around Sydney.

Featured Financial Planners in Manly

A.W.B. Financial Services Pty Ltd

Our key focus is to guide you successfully through the maze of financial issues and priorities. A.W.B. Financial Services Pty Ltd advisers are highly qualified and technically skilled to help you build, protect and transfer wealth. Our advisors work with you to understand your financial and lifestyle goals so they can offer tailored financial advice and provide long term strategies. They can also assist you with the monitoring, reviewing and adjustment of those strategies over time. Our services include: Preparing for retirement and managing retirement, Managing debt, Regular savings plans, Cash flow management, Regular savings plans, Disability and life insurance, Wealth coaching.

Alpha Business Consultants

Helping you pay less tax with our professional tax structuring, advice and tax preparation services. Alpha Business Consultants is a boutique financial planning practice specialising in superannuation, retirement planning and insurance. Our approach is to focus on long term financial goals, providing a detailed plan on how to achieve them and using a diverse range of investment and insurance solutions. We work with you to help with your preparing for retirement and managing retirement, regular savings plans, cash flow management, disability and life insurance, wealth generation, family unity and trust and optimising your super needs.

Altitude Financial Services

Altitude Financial Services are financial advisers who understand the challenges of managing complexity. We will work with you to manage these by establishing a strategic plan, guided by our specialist area savvy. We provide the knowledge, research and advice to choose the best route and vehicle to help you to your financial destination in such a way that you enjoy the ride. We strive to efficiently and effectively service our clients by providing excellent advice and innovative financial solutions appropriate for every stage of their lives.

What's happening in Manly, Sydney

Fashion duo surprised themselves

Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week Australia began today, its catwalks snug in its new home, Eveleigh's Carriageworks.

Brother and sister Camilla and Marc Freeman will toast the 10th anniversary of Camilla and Marc, kicking fashion week off with a double celebration. Alex Perry's runway this afternoon is a shoo-in for an A-list front row, while on Wednesday Camilla ''Kaftan Queen'' Franks will draw an equally flashy eastern suburbs contingent to her show.

Like every fashion showcase, there are the hot tickets and the edgy newcomers - and the Franks' flagship shop on Warners Avenue is across the road from the Bondi Markets that helped launch design duo Natalie and Sarah.

Sarah Lim, 29, and Natalie Foran's, 25, label will feature at fashion week as part of the New Generation show, having set up shop at the markets only in September.

Lim and Foran, whose brother Kieran Foran plays for the Manly Sea Eagles, threw their hats into the MBFWA ring on a whim in January, two months after the November deadline for applications.

''We were so excited when we heard we had been accepted, but all of a sudden thought 'oh, no' we have to get a collection together by April,'' Lim told the Diary.

The couple control all aspects of their business and make the vast majority of their pieces.

It's been a round-the-clock production effort at their Greenwich studio, the spring/summer 2013 runway collection, made of 12 looks, a ''slightly '60s mod look but with a sporty hard-edged rock 'n' roll feel - it's a mixture of both of our styles,'' says Lim.

They designed the Dally M red carpet look for Daly Cherry-Evans' partner, Vessa Rockliff last year.

''We haven't had any time to stop and take it in. I don't believe it's actually happening this week,'' says Foran. Her brother will be along to watch the show. ''After all the games I've been to, cheering from the sidelines, he finally feels he can support me in some way.''

But their devotee bar none is puppy and mascot, Delilah. ''She's been a real stress reliever,'' Foran says.

Late Canberra raid sinks Sydney Roosters

Many intelligent people in the nation's capital are still trying to understand how they did it, and no matter how many pencils and notepads it takes it is still nowhere near even money that they will come up with an explanation.

The record books will say a Jarrod Croker try in the 77th minute drew Canberra level at 22-22 and then Croker's conversion sealed the win 24-22, but they are just details.

No one will ever be able to properly explain it.

Even the old standby - completion rates - won't cut it today.

Canberra coach David Furner lumped all the praise on his players.

"They knew exactly what they needed to do to get back in that game," Furner said.

Until then it had been the Roosters all night.

"That turned around, didn't it?" Roosters coach Trent Robinson said.

Until then the game looked set to be identified by a piece of vintage Sonny Bill Williams.

With the Raiders finally entering the contest last night, fighting back from 16-0 down to 16-12, Williams picked up a loose ball and went on one of those long, loping and deceptive runs of his - and then finished it off with a classic one-handed round-the-corner pass that sent Anthony Minichiello over.

For one half of football the Roosters were challenging Manly as the dominant defensive unit in the competition.While the Sea Eagles have kept their opponents scoreless in seven of the 10 halves they have played this year, the Roosters made many take notice by threatening to go three games in a row keeping their opponents to nil.

In 105 years of rugby league, only Eastern Suburbs in 1919 have managed to keep their opponents scoreless three games in a row.

It was so long ago that all three opponents, North Sydney (33-0), Western Suburbs (5-0) and Annandale (23-0), no longer exist.

Their shot at that record became confetti when Edrick Lee went over five minutes into the second half to narrow the deficit to 16-6.

It was the end of a run that had lasted 211 minutes without a point being scored - more than 3 1/2 hours - and which was set to explode.

The Lee try restored balance for the Raiders, who struggled to complete their sets through most of the first half.

After the kick-off they marched up field again, with Sam Williams holding the ball up against a retreating defence and, with a little show and go, slicing through several hesitant tackles to score next to the posts and reduce the margin even further, to 16-12.

And while the Roosters scored the Minichiello try in between, a Sandor Earl try with 14 minutes to go lit up the last quarter hour.

And then came Croker.

As a spectacle, it was the saving of the match.

Despite all the Raiders' early possession it was the Roosters who opened the scoring. How often does it happen this way?

With one of their few tours into Canberra territory in the first 20 minutes, the five tackles were played out and the Roosters sent the ball high in the air.

Croker was the man underneath it and he might, or might not, have knocked it on. It appeared that he didn't, the crowd felt he didn't and Croker thought he didn't - but the referees believed he did.

Two tackles later James Maloney was barrelling over with a Raider hanging off each limb but none of them able to stop him.

With the conversion, the Roosters led 6-0. The crowd expressed its disagreement with a "bullshit" chant, one last heard around these parts during Question Time.

It opened the way for the class of the Roosters to shine through.

Taking back a more even share of possession, they began marching over the Raiders, whose bullets, for the time being, were all fired. Tries to Michael Oldfield and Mitch Aubusson extended the lead.

CANBERRA 24 (J Croker S Earl E Lee S Williams tries J Croker 4 goals) bt SYDNEY ROOSTERS 22 (M Aubusson J Maloney A Minichiello M Oldfield tries J Maloney 3 goals) at Canberra Stadium. Referee: Matt Cecchin, Luke Phillips. Crowd: 10,969.

WILKO: Manly prove too classy for Bulldogs

One performance doesn?t a season make, yet Manly have leapfrogged the Bulldogs in season prospects, strictly on Friday night?s first-half effort.

Manly were as good as the Dogs were lame.

Maybe the Ben Barba situation has cut a little deeper ?than ?first thought.

?Even taking into account the ?absentees in the forwards, the Dogs were a long way off Manly?s pace.

Full marks to Geoff Toovey. There were doubters when he assumed the role from Des Hasler, yet he has the side whirring away, looking authoritative, defensively sound and like match winners.?

Manly?s kicking game was another extremely positive aspect of a dominant win.

There was league statistician David Middleton on the Footy Showon Thursday, chirping away that four of the last six teams beaten by 50 points or more had won the next week.

?Put that alongside the emotion of the Johnny Mannah Cup and the behind-the-scenes drug investigation at the Sharks, and Parramatta were specials to win on Saturday night.

?Except I still couldn?t tip them, which doesn?t say a great deal about the tipping ability from this quarter.?

Sharks coach Shane Flanagan gave a great insight into the mental abyss his players find themselves in during his post-game presser.

It was telling. Despite a brave win, the Eels are in for a long season.

It remains to be seen just what damage has and will be done to the Sharks over the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority?s investigation, but in Flanagan?s estimation it?s cutting deep already.

The A-League has received many a deserved bouquet this season and welcomed ?an 18per cent increase in crowds and TV viewing figures.

?The three major marquee players have signed up again, which is a terrific endorsement of the competition and their pay packets.?

Alessandro Del Piero, despite his senior years, has been the quintessential marquee in whom performance equals reputation. The standard of play across the board this year has been high and compelling.

Now for the brickbat. In two of the crucial end-of-season matches ? the Western Sydney Wanderers? premiership-sealing last-round match and the first elimination semi-final ? the quality and continuity of play have deteriorated because of over-exuberance and over-acting.?

The players are doing the referees no favours with a nipping-at-the-heels, lawnmower approach to defending and going to ground for the slightest touch when ?in possession.

?Whether this is due to the pressure of the occasion or a hangover from the expressively physical days of the Australian game is arguable. It?s ?just not ?pretty.?

That ?leads to abysmal ?decisions such as that which decided the match on Friday night in favour of Melbourne Victory over the more deserving Perth Glory. The officials are on tenterhooks.

This was a match which was supposed to showcase the A-League. It was a bore-fest of ankle chopping and histrionics ? the two teams shared 41 fouls between them.

?The match was choked right up to ?the referee?s intervention, which sent it to a fascinating yet undeserving extra time.?

Sure, Shane Smeltz could have settled the issue for Perth in real time ?with just a couple of minutes to go ? a penalty snatch from one so experienced was a disaster.

?Yet the incident a moment later at the other end was unrelated.?

For the youngster Andrew Nabbout to first handle the ball and then commit to the deck after modest contact and be rewarded with a penalty were two shocking decisions.?

Yes, there was contact ? and maybe some history ? by Steve Pantelidis, but Nabbout milked it.

?Then Pantelidis was sent off after receiving his second yellow.

Other individuals were favoured by not being yellow-carded despite repeated infringements.?

Pantelidis was ?red-carded ultimately for a tackle which occurs ten times in every match. If it was dissent, maybe the referee should have turned a deaf ear.

Given the pattern of the game and that three-pronged arrow for Perth, there was an ironic twist in extra time when the Glory were trailing 1-2. One of their players rose to his feet quickly ?after being ?minimally fouled, yet no penalty was given.

Forgot the hyperbolic ??that?s the beauty of our game?? and the great ??uncertainty?? which adds to the spectacle. ? The wrong side won on Friday night.?

They advance to a final against Central Coast, not due to the rub of the green but some shoddy refereeing.?

But the player pressure on the officials makes it unrewarding all round. It might be incumbent on David Gallop and his crew to tell everyone to lift their games.

Otherwise the developing pot of gold might be devalued.

If you were lucky enough to be watching TVN?s vibrant racing coverage on Saturday afternoon, you would have caught a classically emotionally moment that live sport can deliver like few other forms of entertainment.

Overreach duly won the Golden Slipper and Gai Waterhouse was her effusive self ... as you would be in registering win number five in the classic, and one delivered to her so easily.

But it was the reaction of young jockey Tommy Berry which was priceless. After embracing his twin brother Nathan, a poignant moment it itself , Tom turned towards the cameras and basically just lost it. He could barely speak, overwhelmed ?with tears of joy after delivering a great ride on a fine horse and securing his biggest ever win.

It was a wonderful piece of theatre and there wasn?t a dry eye in the house.

What a difference watching racing where you can go in with the personalities of the game and it?s not all about feverish coverage of one race to the next servicing punting interests alone without the passion.

It?s also a place where you can see Gai W grit her teeth after an average ride on More Joyous by Nash Rawiller (though the stewards found no fault) who then almost buried Pierro in his nervousness in the George Ryder.?

Those two rides, coupled with Tommy Berry?s reaction, underlined just how much pressure exists with a hoop when riding the big draw cards. Failure is untenable.

Congratulations to Richard Callander, Caroline Searcy, Bruce Clark and the TVN team for lifting racing above the tote dividends. More please.

?If you were looking into the psyche of one Steve Smith, New South Wales all- rounder and borderline Australian player you would say that another Cricket Australia contract might just be the confidence booster he needs after showing some good batting signs in India.

Nope, left off the 20 strong list announced last week.

Moises Henriques might have some bowling issues. Who doesn?t in India apart from the home spinners. Yet his scores of 68 and 81 not out in the First Test in India reeked of class.

A couple of tests later he?s out of the side and can?t get a contract. Yet he would seem the ideal Ashes style player.

Jackson Bird, two tests ? eleven wickets. Looks the goods. No contract.

Usman Khawaja... where does he stand? No contract.

Yet managing to secure ?Australian contracts are some injury prone bowlers, some all-rounders of modest ability and a couple of players near the end of their careers. Two ?Ashes campaigns are on the landscape yet looking at the 20 contracted players, it?s hard to find a solid test eleven and back-up.

Cricket Australia is in more than a transitional zone... there is a crisis.?

The information contained on or linked to this web site is general information. Nothing on this site is or purports to be advice. You should not rely on any information on or linked to this web site. If you need advice, you should seek personal professional advice based on your own circumstances.
Over 10,000 Australians
have used our service to help them find the right Financial Planner in the Sydney area.
Edward was matched to Unisuper.
33 minutes ago
Find financial planners in Sydney
Get started now ยป
Events in Sydney
Financial Planning seminars and expos in the Sydney Area.
Lastest Tweets