WME Exam 2 Managed Products Case Guide

CSI WME Exam 2 case guide for managed products, with learning objectives, case-priority cues, planning traps, and next-step review.

Managed Products is Chapter 23, part of the CSI WME Exam 2 topic Managed Products, Portfolio Monitoring and Evaluation, weighted at 14%. Study it as a case-priority lesson: WME Exam 2 questions usually test whether you can extract the relevant facts, rank the client issue, identify missing information, and choose the strongest next step before selecting a product or tactic.

Learning Objectives

  • Choose the managed product type that best fits the client’s need for diversification, simplicity, and control.
  • Compare mutual funds and ETFs using the most important planning factor in the case.
  • Recognize when fees and turnover materially weaken the attractiveness of a managed-product recommendation.
  • Determine when a wrap structure or managed account is appropriate for the client’s complexity and asset level.
  • Identify when a hedge-fund or alternative-style product is outside the client’s practical needs or risk tolerance.
  • Assess whether tax efficiency is a decisive factor in the managed-product choice.
  • Choose the product structure that best balances customization, cost, and implementation ease.
  • Identify the strongest criticism of a proposed managed-product recommendation.
  • Select the managed-product recommendation that best matches the client’s case facts.

Key Concepts

ConceptWhat to know for WME Exam 2 review
Case factChoose the managed product type that best fits the client’s need for diversification, simplicity, and control
Priority cueCompare mutual funds and ETFs using the most important planning factor in the case
Missing factRecognize when fees and turnover materially weaken the attractiveness of a managed-product recommendation
Constraint cueDetermine when a wrap structure or managed account is appropriate for the client’s complexity and asset level
Next-step cueIdentify when a hedge-fund or alternative-style product is outside the client’s practical needs or risk tolerance
Risk cueAssess whether tax efficiency is a decisive factor in the managed-product choice
Tax or legal cueChoose the product structure that best balances customization, cost, and implementation ease
Product-fit cueIdentify the strongest criticism of a proposed managed-product recommendation
Exam trapSelect the managed-product recommendation that best matches the client’s case facts

Case Focus

WME Exam 2 fact patterns are case-based, so a correct answer often depends on which fact matters most, not just which product or rule is familiar. The stronger answer identifies the dominant client issue, checks whether a fact is missing, then selects the planning, tax, retirement, estate, investment, product, or monitoring step that best follows from the case.

Read each case for the issue being tested: discovery, cash flow, risk capacity, borrowing, family law, tax, insurance, retirement income, estate transfer, asset allocation, equity or debt role, managed-product fit, performance review, or rebalancing. A technically correct answer can still be wrong if it solves a lower-priority problem.

Case Decision Framework

If the case shows…Prefer an answer that…
several goals or constraintsranks the priority before choosing a product, account, or strategy
missing or inconsistent factsgathers or clarifies information before implementation
calculation datauses the calculation to support a planning decision, not as an isolated exercise
product or portfolio proposalconnects risk capacity, objective, tax, liquidity, time horizon, and monitoring to the recommendation

How to Apply This Section

Start by writing a three-line case summary: client situation, objective, and dominant constraint. Then decide whether the question is testing fund and ETF fit, fees, mandates, risk, disclosure, portfolio overlap, and product comparison. That classification keeps you from over-weighting whichever product fact appears last in the stem.

For WME Exam 2, sequence matters. A good case answer often follows this order: gather facts, rank goals, identify constraints, test feasibility, choose the next planning step, document the rationale, and identify monitoring triggers. Skipping a step can make a good-sounding answer too aggressive.

Review Checklist

Review questionWhy it matters
What is the case really asking the advisor to decide?The exam often gives extra facts that distract from the primary client issue.
Which fact is missing or most important?Missing information can block implementation even when the proposed tactic sounds reasonable.
What is the first defensible next step?Case questions often reward sequencing, not just end-state recommendations.
What follow-up must be documented or monitored?The answer should remain defensible after implementation, review, or client change.

Common Pitfalls

  • reading the case as isolated fact recall instead of ranking the client issues
  • choosing a plausible product answer before identifying the dominant constraint
  • doing a calculation without deciding what decision the calculation supports
  • treating product characteristics as sufficient without checking case objectives and risk capacity

Study Notes

After each practice set, tag misses by first failed step: facts missed, wrong priority, wrong interpretation, calculation without purpose, product-fit error, tax effect missed, estate or retirement issue missed, or weak monitoring step.

For final review, summarize this section in three lines: the case fact that controls the answer, the priority it creates, and the next step that makes the best answer stronger than the nearest distractor.

Key Takeaways

  • WME Exam 2 review should connect this topic to fund and ETF fit, fees, mandates, risk, disclosure, portfolio overlap, and product comparison.
  • The best case answer normally ranks the client issue before naming a tactic.
  • A recommendation is weak if it solves one visible fact while ignoring a stronger constraint elsewhere in the case.
  • When two answers sound plausible, prefer the one that follows the cleaner next-step sequence and protects the client record.

Continue Review

Return to the WME Exam 2 guide for the full topic table, or use the WME Exam 2 Cheat Sheet for case workflow, formulas, priority cues, and final review prompts.

Revised on Friday, May 29, 2026