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I'd welcome views from others on this, but I suspect there is quite some level of misunderstanding here....but from the beginning advised by all the powers that be ....checked AFP approved ...no probs with ASIC... what else can you do!..
Thanks for your reply.....Why am I not surprised by your response.......I'm a little unsure of what "six months of meetings and compulsory education on financial matters " actually entails, has anybody in this forum been through this
We were clients for years and know dozens who were also stormified. This is just more stormified verbage . . . . Jelich is referring to the couple hours of graphs and stats and quotes that EC or another adviser would present to prospective clients, basically trying to sell you that stocks were a better investment than property . . . Then one had an interview where no risk analysis was done - otherwise how would they have taken all the super from so many retirees and esp disabled people and highly geared them. Then you got the 100+ page statement of advice which was meant to confuse with weird data including assessing one's debt as an asset. If all that was education, which took less than 8 hours by the way, how come we are all broke, were blocked from getting out and are confused as to why storm did what it did - except to make big bucks for founders
.
"Infocus Money Management has hired six advisors from the now-defunct Storm Financial firm"
Story in The Daily here;
http://www.thedaily.com.au/news/2009/feb/18/financial-storm-comes-focus/
A goodwill gesture ?
As a novice investor with a tiny portfolio, I was just wondering if an upfront fee of 7%, as Storm apparently charged, is reasonable? Seems like an unreasonable amount to me.
What's happening at cassimatis.com.au ?
It's been 6 days since we've had a "Latest News" update from Wilkinson Media and I noticed that there hasn't been a recent update to the "Recent Questions". Have people run out of questions?
There's something about the Storm saga that rings a bell: why was it so hard to get your money out once it was in? Surely it wasn't only because Storm was going to lose trailing commissions? What it smacks of is a Ponzi or pyramid scheme, where new investors' money is needed to pay returns (and occasionally repayments of capital) to old investors. When inflows from new investors start to dry up, then withdrawals by existing investors are 'discouraged', which certainly seems to be the case with Storm. Was there some of this going on as well? Did every cent that was meant to go into investments (after those generous upfront fees were deducted) actually go into those investments?
Solly,
I asked a number of direct questions on their site but unfortunatey they were evidently too hard to answer. In any case the spin doctors will not allow any real questions to be answered.
Bill
It seems to me that when the market plunged the underlying home loan was forgotten and they (storm) were more concerned with keeping people in the market than having a logical exit strategy.
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