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Certainly seems they had their own retirement plan way ahead of that of any of their clients. Hard to believe they could be simply ignorant about what was happening in the market, so the only other option for their behaviour seems to be pure self interest.The real problem here was the blind faith by Cassimatis that the market would not drop significantly and did they care? They had those commissions coming in and fobbed people off who wanted to get out.
That must be simply awful, Smiley. I'm really sorry.After all we go to experts for our health (doctors), for legal matters (lawyers), etc but I will never go to a financial planner again. I am not losig my house but in my 60s I now have a large mortgage for house that was paid for 3 years ago.
I think someone suggested earlier in the thread that the whole Storm culture seemed to have elements of a cult. "Controlling" is what comes across from many of you.Well said Monario, we were stalled and blocked by our Storm advisors all the way down. They would'nt let us get out. For people on this forum that haven't dealt with Storm to be crictical of the victims is unfair. Only Storm clients know how CONTROLLING they were. As i said we tried to bail about 5 times and the answer was allways NO NO AND NO!!!!
Not greed to want to be self sufficient in retirement.Back in 2000 and 2001 Howard and Costello were carrying on about how we would all have to look after ourselves in retirement because the pension just wasn’t going to cut it. There was story after story about how much money you would need to have in your kitty so you could retire and maintain your current standard of living. Who doesn’t want to do that? If that’s greed then we are all guilty.
You were clearly not alone in this.We owned our house but with only five or six years to go before my husband retired we didn’t have enough money for what everyone was saying.
We asked our accountant for advice and he tried to sell us a master fund. There were so many fees our money was better off in the bank. So we started doing the rounds of financial planners. I knew NOTHING. I was so financially naive that I didn’t even know that managed funds were used to buy shares. I didn’t know where the money went. I had never thought about it.
This is the sort of loan amount that has many onlookers with their jaws on the floor! Especially with people close to retirement. Holy ****!We live in Townsville, Cassimatis advertised on T.V. and we ended up at his seminars. I learnt a lot from those seminars but when Cassimatis told us we needed to take out a 450K margin loan (at the time our house was worth 130K)
So Storm didn't explain to you that there was any risk involved? They suggested the market would always go up and by borrowing that huge amount you still would be entirely safe? Would you have believed this?we baulked but only because we had already had financial problems over a failed business and had lived under the sickening stress that brings. We had recovered by selling our big beautiful Queenslander and buying a smaller cheaper cottage and we had made a resolution that we would never put our house on the line again. We didn’t know about risk, bull and bear markets, margin loans and LVRs. It was just a simple matter of been there- done that, not going to do it again.
Good for you for taking responsibility. Your efforts to educate yourself have obviously paid off.So I learnt about the market myself, rolled our super over into a DIY, got an online broker and went for it. We also changed our accountant. It just so happened that our timing into the market was impeccable. Beginners’ luck. But I had a lot of learning to do and it was that learning that got us out before the end of 2007.
Not sure it's fair to suggest that politicians 'created fear'. They rightly pointed out that living on the age pension was a poor option. Their primary motive may have been to keep the welfare budget under control, given the ageing population, but I don't think they were doing anything unreasonable in urging people to save for their retirement. Australia has a very poor record of personal savings.We did well out of the market and will get back in when the time is right but there were times over those bull years when we looked at each other and said if we had done what Cassimatis told us we would have been laughing. But if we’d gone with Cassimatis we would have left it all up to him, done whatever he said, and we wouldn’t have known to get out.
I am so sick of hearing the word greed being associated with the poor people who have lost everything because of Storm. Retirees who were only trying to set themselves up for self sufficiency and a comfortable retirement have lost everything. Don’t people think they are already going through enough mental anguish without heaping more coals on their heads? Whenever someone does that they betray their own lack of compassion and empathy. All these poor people are guilty of is the fear that the politicians created back then, naivety and lack of experience.
ASIC's record isn't great in this regard. It would do no harm to be on ASIC's back. If you have lawyers doing this so much the better.Word is that ASIC won't even chastise them.
"The time, drive or training": Daisy has answered this.And for those smarter amongst us where does one who does not have the time, drive or training to predict the markets invest one's super savings if not in property, money market or shares through a financial adviser?
My opinion; your call.
No one is saying not to invest super savings in property, money market or shares. All anyone is saying is using leverage to the extent that has occurred with at least some of Storm's clients has to be unbelievably risky especially when the market clearly was falling over the last year and more.
And for those smarter amongst us where does one who does not have the time, drive or training to predict the markets invest one's super savings if not in property, money market or shares through a financial adviser?
My opinion; your call.
I understand your viewpoint. But I don't think consulting any 'professional' in any field completely removes the need for personal decision making.Full context please. My point is simply that the punter must rely on an adviser and this adviser (Storm) had no bear market strategy.
ASIC won't help and the FPA won't help, they have no track record in this regard. What will help is (1) identify the points of law involved when licenced advisors provide advice that is flawed and consequently results in the loss of all their clients investment funds on something as simple (for the average hands-on investor) as a forseeable margin call in a down market, (2) take a class action against the advisor(s).
My opinion; your call
Hi Daisy, I'm not at all surprised. You must be very thankful now for that room spinning and head buzzing.Julia,To be perfectly honest I really don't remember much of what was said after they proposed a 450K loan. The room started spinning and there was a buzzing in my head.
Sure. Just that they apparently conveniently omitted discussion of the effect of leverage if the market fell.And Julia and others on this thread I wasn't saying that the greed thing was necessarily coming from here. I apologise if that's how it read. I've seen all kinds of smug little letters in our Townsville papers implying that people have lost everything because they were greedy. As I said what saved us was because after having lost one house we are not prepared to put our house on the line for anything.
The focus of the seminars was there was no risk because the investment was an index fund and how the market always rises higher than the last peak after a crash, and there were lots of powerpoint screens to prove it.
So provided you hang in there all will be well.
Well said Monario, we were stalled and blocked by our Storm advisors all the way down. They would'nt let us get out. For people on this forum that haven't dealt with Storm to be crictical of the victims is unfair. Only Storm clients know how CONTROLLING they were. As i said we tried to bail about 5 times and the answer was allways NO NO AND NO!!!!
The sad thing is, I like many other people will never work through an advisor again, the repercussions for the financial industry that this will create will hit hard, and be felt throughout the country. And on a moral level, I am trying to reach as big a part of the community as I can to make them aware of such problems with advisors.
So why will it be sad that you and many others will never again work through a financial advisor?
Won't investors be better off if they stop relying on financial advisors, and instead learn some basic investment strategies, including risk control? Then they can 'row their own boats' in future, rather than rely on incompetent clowns who masquerade as investment advisors and financial planning experts, but in reality are little more than glorified commission salesmen.
They stalled you and blocked you and wouldn't let you get out?
In what way wouldn't they let you get out? How could they stop you?
I think what you mean is, they talked you out of it.
But when it was all said and done, it was your decision whether to get out or stay in. Correct?
Did it occur to you that it was in their best interests to keep you in there so they could continue charging you ongoing management fees?
Given that you were sufficiently concerned to approach them with a view to pulling the plug, did you consider overriding their advice to stay in?
Did you consider adopting a middle of the road approach by quitting at least part of your investment, and retaining the rest?
My parents have been trying to get copies of some statements and a copy of the loan proposal from storm..
They have said the administrators have denied them the right to pass this on to clients, could this be true? I thought under the new freedom of nfo act, that any document relating to personal information had to be made available?
They stalled you and blocked you and wouldn't let you get out?
In what way wouldn't they let you get out? How could they stop you?
I think what you mean is, they talked you out of it.
But when it was all said and done, it was your decision whether to get out or stay in. Correct?
Did it occur to you that it was in their best interests to keep you in there so they could continue charging you ongoing management fees?
Given that you were sufficiently concerned to approach them with a view to pulling the plug, did you consider overriding their advice to stay in?
Did you consider adopting a middle of the road approach by quitting at least part of your investment, and retaining the rest?
So why will it be sad that you and many others will never again work through a financial advisor?
Won't investors be better off if they stop relying on financial advisors, and instead learn some basic investment strategies, including risk control? Then they can 'row their own boats' in future, rather than rely on incompetent clowns who masquerade as investment advisors and financial planning experts, but in reality are little more than glorified commission salesmen.
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