Not All Financial Advisors are Created Equal
With the number of âfinancial advisorsâ growing every day, how do you know who you can
trust with your money? Many financial advisors are nothing more than glorified salespeople
with a nifty title. The investments they sell have a direct correlation with the compensation
they receive. Given those dynamics, what are the odds that you will receive objective
advice? Donât be a victim. The following guide will help you make more informed decisions
on how advisors are compensated.
Stockbrokers
Commission based advice is great—if youâre a broker or brokerage firm. For the investor,
however, itâs a death wish. This type of advice is plagued with high costs and opaque disclosureâhigh costs that chip away at your profits. The registered representative (stockbroker) – unlike a registered investment adviser – has no fiduciary duty to place the clientâs interests first. Inadequate disclosure coupled with conflicts of interest guarantees that a fair number of people are going to be victimized by bad advice.
Fee-Based Advisors
âFee basedâ advisors (also referred to as fee-offset) can be just as bad, if not worse.
Commission based compensation includes âfee-basedâ compensation which is a particularly
evil label referring to both fees and commissions. Fee based advisors have the ability to charge a percentage âbasedâ on the assets they manage, but they also have the ability to
sell you a commission based product (like an annuity, a load fund or life insurance).
âDouble dippingâ, as itâs known in the industry, while not illegal is certainly immoral. Donât be
fooled. Stay away from advisors peddling investments that charge you front end or back
end loads or surrender charges.
Fee-Only Advisors
Fee-only compensation (not to be confused with fee-based) is non commission driven and
eliminates the exploitation of investors, where quality objective financial advice is the only
product, and the advisor sits on the same side of the table with the client. The only way the
advisor can make more money on your relationship, is to make more money for you. Most credible fee-only advisors assume a fiduciary role in the investment management process, putting the clientâs interest ahead of their own. This includes finding the best investment alternatives with the lowest internal expenses, and one of the best ways of enhancing returns is to control portfolio costs.
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High net worth, high income households are often easy targets for bad advice. When hiring
an advisor, a considerable amount of thought and research should be dedicated to the process. After all, itâs only your money. Here are some things you should ask when engaging a financial professional:
⢠How are you paid?
⢠Are your recommendations in any way influenced by compensation?
⢠What is your investment philosophy?
⢠Do you provide an Investment Policy Statement? (If you donât know what that isâfind
out!)
⢠How much authority will you exert over my accounts?
⢠Do you have a clean regulatory record?
⢠What are your credentials?
⢠What is your educational background?
⢠How much experience do you have?
⢠What are your continuing education requirements?
Finally, you should also request and review the advisorâs written disclosure statement, ADV
part I and II.
Resources
The Certified Financial Planner⢠Board of Standards offers some great (free) online guides
on how to choose a planner. Check out their site at: http://www.cfp.net/learn/library.asp.
If you are looking for a fee-only advisor (in my humble opinion-itâs the only way to go) the
National Association of Personal Financial Advisors (NAPFA) is an excellent resource, check
them out at: http://napfa.org/.
In your quest for an advisor, as with anything else, the more informed you become the better
your outcome should be
Cathy Pareto, MBA, CFP®, AIF® is the Founder and President of Cathy Pareto & Associates, Inc. a fee-only financial planning and investment management firm.
www.cathypareto.com
Blog http://cathypareto.blogspot.com/
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