About

Jim Cahn holds the role of Chair of the Investment Committee & Chief Strategy Officer. Jim has been with Wealth Enhancement Group since 2012 and has been instrumental in the firm’s success as it has evolved from a regional player to establishing a strong national foothold. His contributions to growing the firm’s investment platform and executing its inorganic growth initiatives have helped to shape Wealth Enhancement Group into a leading investment advisory platform.

Prior to joining Wealth Enhancement Group, Jim served as Chief Investment Officer and Portfolio Manager at the Vestian Group, where he oversaw investment programs, launched a hedge fund-of-funds, and consulted with clients.

A frequent contributor to financial media, Jim has appeared in CNBC, The Wall Street Journal, and Bloomberg among other prominent outlets.

Advisory registrations are held with Wealth Enhancement Advisory Services. Advisory services offered through Wealth Enhancement Advisory Services, a registered investment advisor. Check the background of investment professionals associated with this site on the Investment Advisor Public Disclosure Website.

Education

  • MBA, University of Chicago Booth School of Business
  • BS, Economics and Performance Studies, Northwestern University

Articles by topic

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Blog
In this 2025 Market Outlook webinar, Wealth Enhancement’s Jim Cahn, Doug Huber, and Aya Yoshioka review last year’s strong S&P 500 performance and discuss key market drivers for 2025, including inflation, interest rates, and new tariffs.
1/30/2025
Blog
In the October Markets Monthly webinar, Roundtable™ experts Jim Cahn, Doug Huber, Gary Quinzel, and Aya Yoshioka analyze Q3 market trends, the Fed’s first rate cut, surging equities, and early insights into the 2025 election’s economic impact.
10/31/2024
Blog
The Second Quarter of 2020 was marked by a glaring contradiction, one of the strongest equity rallies in the last fifty years against likely the greatest decline in GDP in the U.S. (and globally) since the depths of the Great Depression of the 1930s. As we have noted before, economic data and markets don’t necessarily move together; economic data tends to be backward-looking while markets are forward-looking.
7/1/2020

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