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won't have enough saved for retirement, explains Sandra Pierce, a financial adviser with Toronto's Blackmont Capital. (Men have their own worries, although theirs often fixate on their ability to be a good provider, she says.)"It's an irrational fear that a lot of successful women have, that they could lose it all," says Pierce, who is known as "The Bag Lady of Bay Street" for the well received beaded clutch purse she delivers to a prospective client (those with assets of $500,000 or more) with a tag that reads,"Do you suffer from bag lady syndrome?"Inside, a note reassures the recipient that "financial empowerment is in the bag," explaining more about the services of Blackmont's Fox Pierce Segal Group, which manages $150 million on behalf of 135 high net worth households.Though in many cases, such fears are irrational, the "bag lady" theme "truly strikes a chord with women more and more," says Pierce."It's not that they worry about being out on the street. They worry about not having enough money to stay in control of their lives."For Pierce, who recently turned 50, the message first hit home about 15 years ago when she heard an interview in which Sherry Lansing, a former CEO of Paramount Pictures and the first woman to head a major filmmaking studio, expressed her own deep seated fears of becoming a "bag lady.""My god, I thought, I've been outed. I'd become very successful but I still had these inner fears," says Pierce, adding that until that moment, she'd been unable to articulate her own uneasiness, even after a long career as a financial adviser. She began to realize many other women