It's not as easy as you might think. People who work in financial advice require sales skills. And the vast majority of advising is simply making the client feel good and happy. But how do you know if they have your best interests at heart?
There are a couple of high level tests. The first is compensation model. Understanding comp should not make you decide on the spot if they are good or bad advisors, it should instead teach you where to look for the next test.
There are two models for compensation:
I personally have interviewed with, or rejected interviews with many of the major firms. There are many trying to jump in on the Fee ONLY movement by presenting Fee BASED (a word they made up to obfuscate) and the key here is again Compensation.
When I interviewed with a leading NY Boutique they informed me that I would be compensated by:
However, Fee ONLY planners can be bad advisors too, because if they are compensated by Assets under management they have an incentive to keep your assets, and gather more. So you can't just judge on the comp model.
How to tell?
The key to knowing is to understanding Opportunity Costs - it's not easy, but I'd like to make this a part of the forum too, so ask away please. Any good advisor or planner needs to offer you an IF, THEN, ELSE approach to a solution. And it has to include vanilla options.
For example: An advisor/planner recommends an investment strategy of X different funds. You have to ask them: over the course of 1 year what are the fees for this fund structure compared to Vanguard Index Funds?
If they answer with anything "Sales Like" such as "these funds are different/special/unique" or "index funds are different/bad/not right" then they are full of crap. A true advisor/planner will show you side by side. Bear in mind, that a good Sales Guy can present data in a tricky manner, when asked to compare with index funds they might search for a period of history for performance comparison. While this has some value, and while I am not against Actively Managed funds, it is not the question we asked.
If you have a store of cash and some debt, there is a real chance for abuse here. Because a Fee ONLY planner wouldn't get paid if you took $100,000 and paid down the mortgage, he would if you took it and bought a Vanguard Fund.
So if you have money (either in savings or as a windfall) and you are advised to invest it you should demand a model showing the savings offered vs paying down a debt (IE not adding more money to his Assets under management) that dataset should include savings on interest paid, and also include his own fees.
Hope that gets you started, and please feel free to use this thread to ask more questions. There are a LOT of really shitty people out there who are trying to make money from you. Be careful.
There are a couple of high level tests. The first is compensation model. Understanding comp should not make you decide on the spot if they are good or bad advisors, it should instead teach you where to look for the next test.
There are two models for compensation:
- Fee ONLY - the advisor is unable to 'sell you' a product that has a commission attached. They cannot sell you life insurance, or mutual funds that have load fees. You have to pay these advisors directly. There are two main ways to pay a Fee ONLY planner:
- Flat Fees - by the project or by the hour
- Assets under Management Fees - a percentage of the total wealth they are managing for you.
- Commission Based - the advisor can sell you anything, earn commissions from life insurance or mutual funds, providing they have the proper licenses. They can also charge you Flat fees, by the project or by the hour, and they can also charge you Assets under management.
I personally have interviewed with, or rejected interviews with many of the major firms. There are many trying to jump in on the Fee ONLY movement by presenting Fee BASED (a word they made up to obfuscate) and the key here is again Compensation.
When I interviewed with a leading NY Boutique they informed me that I would be compensated by:
- New Business Developed (new clients) or New Business brought under management (more money from old clients)
- Selling proprietary products to either.
However, Fee ONLY planners can be bad advisors too, because if they are compensated by Assets under management they have an incentive to keep your assets, and gather more. So you can't just judge on the comp model.
How to tell?
The key to knowing is to understanding Opportunity Costs - it's not easy, but I'd like to make this a part of the forum too, so ask away please. Any good advisor or planner needs to offer you an IF, THEN, ELSE approach to a solution. And it has to include vanilla options.
For example: An advisor/planner recommends an investment strategy of X different funds. You have to ask them: over the course of 1 year what are the fees for this fund structure compared to Vanguard Index Funds?
If they answer with anything "Sales Like" such as "these funds are different/special/unique" or "index funds are different/bad/not right" then they are full of crap. A true advisor/planner will show you side by side. Bear in mind, that a good Sales Guy can present data in a tricky manner, when asked to compare with index funds they might search for a period of history for performance comparison. While this has some value, and while I am not against Actively Managed funds, it is not the question we asked.
- We want to know how much in fees?
- We also want to know, how much in early surrender fees if we change our minds?
If you have a store of cash and some debt, there is a real chance for abuse here. Because a Fee ONLY planner wouldn't get paid if you took $100,000 and paid down the mortgage, he would if you took it and bought a Vanguard Fund.
So if you have money (either in savings or as a windfall) and you are advised to invest it you should demand a model showing the savings offered vs paying down a debt (IE not adding more money to his Assets under management) that dataset should include savings on interest paid, and also include his own fees.
Hope that gets you started, and please feel free to use this thread to ask more questions. There are a LOT of really shitty people out there who are trying to make money from you. Be careful.