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I am now contemplating switching to another professional financial adviser who charges me a professional fee (hourly rate) for finacial advice.
Presumably, since an hourly rate is not tied to the value of my investments, or generated by the purchase of any specific investment, couldn't I be confident to expect & receive objective advice for a more moderate fee? Though I'd expect to pay a higher hourly rate for an experienced adviser.
I hope receiving some good comments, recommendations and/or guidance from participants of this forum who have more savvy in this matter that I have.
Kind regards...
I believe you.Been thru this.
Good luck finding one
At that time, 3-4 yrs ago, there was virtually nothing, even in Sydney.
Financial Planning””wonderful industry!!! I am not a financial planner now. Was, but pulled out, as the Licensed Dealers would only accept plans based on the sale of products that were on their product lists””all commission based. So I could not provide an authentic service that was truly unbiased, so I got out of it””I have to sleep soundly at night.
Her dilemma is common””where do I get genuine financial planning advice””answer””it does not exist to my knowledge. I don’t know any financial adviser who I would trust to do the right thing. They are all under the control of licensed dealers and I don’t know any licensed dealers that are in it to serve their client’s best interest.
Been thru this.
Good luck finding one
At that time, 3-4 yrs ago, there was virtually nothing, even in Sydney.
I believe such service is now available, you dont mention your location?
I see no good reason why at least some financial advisors should not be fee for service, exactly like accountants, solicitors.
Hopefully the recent enquiry into financial planners fees will lead to a more competitive stucture.
I guess another consideration, is has your portfolio outperformed?
I believe you.
A friend has been looking for this sort of impartial adviser, being dissatisfied with the fees being charged on her underperforming Super.
I ran it by my accountant to see if he could recommend anyone. This is his response:
To the original poster: educate yourself so you can manage your own investments. It is absolutely not as difficult as you might imagine.
Read through the Beginners' Lounge on this forum.
Go to www.asx.com.au and work through their very clear Education modules.
Good on you for at least being aware of what you're paying in fees.
I, too, would be interested to know what return they have been getting for you, net of fees?
Yes, I'm similarly curious.Question
If you had an advisor who charged a fee on a performance basis.
IE no profit no fee.
What % of profit would you feel acceptable and why?
Mind you I dont know of one but am curious.
Question
If you had an advisor who charged a fee on a performance basis.
IE no profit no fee.
What % of profit would you feel acceptable and why?
Mind you I dont know of one but am curious.
I am now contemplating switching to another professional financial adviser who charges me a professional fee (hourly rate) for finacial advice.
Question
If you had an advisor who charged a fee on a performance basis.
IE no profit no fee.
What % of profit would you feel acceptable and why?
Mind you I dont know of one but am curious.
What advice do you want? What hourly rate would you be prepared to pay for that advice?
I know of some Financial Advisers that work with industry funds and they charge between $220-$250 per hour. But then the advice is really limited to the industry funds that they deal with. They wouldn't look at anything outside of the industry superannuation, such as other investments or personal insurances.
There is also this link. http://www.aifa.com.au/
I haven't used either of these so I can't evaluate them for you.
The question is what type of advice you are looking for and who can deliver that advice to you in the best and most cost effective way.
I manage my own investments now.
This requires a very steep learning curve, and much time and work.
I outperform the relevant benchmarks.
The saving on advisor fees is an annual 5 figure sum,
entirely compounding, and as I am relativly young, just this alone should eventually add up to be worth a VERY large amount, leaving aside any potential improvement in my own performance.
I did find some guys that were licenced financial planners who would give me advice, for between $250-350 per hour...but I didnt think I needed it.
At the end of the day, these guys are working X hours per week, and it seems the business model is entirely stuctured to be more profitable on a commission basis...you may be seen as a less profitable distraction.
My hugely experienced accountant has a loathing of fin P fee stucture, but that is mainly cause he wishes he could charge like that.
IMO there will eventually be fee-for-service, but I have been saying that for years.
Been down that road we are still paying for professional advice we recieved two years ago and have since found out all advice given was based on kickbacks ,do yourself a favour and take control of your own destiny and save yourself a motza
Kayman, I'm puzzled by this, unless you mean you made the 'motza' via your job, rather than investments in financial markets?Easy said, I'm retired and knew how to make motza, it's a different kettle of fish keeping it
Investing in retirement is essentially no different to investing at any other time of your life: you still need to grow your capital to cope with cost of living, inflation etc. One expense you won't have if you're retired is tax. Presumably you're drawing a pension from your Super which doesn't attract any tax?How did you get enlightened and savvied up, what tools were or are available to you?
Hi Kayman,
I will reply online, but feel free to PM me if you wish
I dont have the contact details anymore of the advisors I found that were prepared to do fee for service, it was 4yrs ago.
I went the low-cost SMSF route instead
If you want a fee for service advisor, Google and phone them, is my best advice.
At the time, Mark Bouris?, the loan fellow was bleating about setting up something called Yellow Brick Road ( or similar, which was supposed to be f-f-s, but I dont know what happened )
I am not sure from your post what your intentions are, but in my case I use ASF as a sort of Open University, and there is so much material available on the Internet, and I find it surprising that more retired pople dont take an active interest.
An easy transitional strategy is to replicate your advisors portfolio setup in a low cost SMSF.
If you have a properly setup wrap, that is formerly reviewed, then you should have documentation that outlines the investment strategies?
You can get exposure to all sectors via direct shares and ETF shares
any person find themselves paying excessive advisor/wrap fees for an account that holds a large cash component...well it must make them feel like self-harming.
my total fees went from over 1% to < .07%
MER is still present, as I cant utilise an ultra low-cost broker.
I must admit it feels great to shed the leaches and ticks, low tax pension and minimal fees means a long term compounding build (hopefully)
Kayman, I'm puzzled by this, unless you mean you made the 'motza' via your job, rather than investments in financial markets?
Investing in retirement is essentially no different to investing at any other time of your life: you still need to grow your capital to cope with cost of living, inflation etc. One expense you won't have if you're retired is tax. Presumably you're drawing a pension from your Super which doesn't attract any tax?
It's a bit hard to offer anything more until you let us know whether your 'motza' has come from financial markets or whether in fact in retirement you are effectively starting all over again with investing.
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