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What is a fiduciary? How are financial advisors compensated? What is a fatal mistake I see people make with investing? In this episode of retirement made easy, I answer these listener questions so that you can be well-educated about your advisor—and your investments.
You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...What is a fiduciary? Why would you need one? Do I recommend working with a fiduciary? A fiduciary is someone that acts on the behalf of another person/people and puts their best interests ahead of his or her own. A fiduciary is both ethically AND legally responsible for their actions. Because of this, a fiduciary can be sued if they’re found to be negligent in their duties. The legal aspect holds them accountable.
A simple example of a fiduciary is the legal guardian of a child. They make financial decisions on the child’s behalf and they’re responsible for their well-being. Fiduciaries can be financial advisors as well. I wouldn’t work with a financial advisor that wasn’t a fiduciary. I am a fiduciary and make sure prospective clients know that I have their best interests in mind. If I won’t put my money in something, I wouldn’t put yours in it either.
Three ways financial advisors get compensatedThere are three ways financial advisors can charge for their services:
We meet with clients annually or semi-annually to show them their progress, update their retirement plan, etc. The clients that I get who were under a compensation-based agreement with their advisor never spoke with them. There was very little service after the sale (in my personal experience).
Keep portion control in mindIn 2008, someone called me who said they were the brother of a client. They wanted to cash out their 401k and put it all into GM stock (because it was at an all-time low). They were certain that GM would be bailed out. But I don’t believe in all-or-nothing thinking. I told them if they were dead-set on doing it to only use a small portion of their 401k. He didn’t follow my advice.
Remember what happened? GM went to zero. They filed for bankruptcy. This guy put his life savings into GM stock and he lost everything. Never ever dump your entire nest egg into one thing. You need to abandon the all-or-nothing way of thinking. You can always sell a portion of something—it doesn’t have to be it all. Rethink the “go big or go home” mentality. Exercise portion control into your investment strategy.
Connect With Gregg GonzalezSubscribe to Retirement Made EasyOn Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts
4.9
2222 ratings
What is a fiduciary? How are financial advisors compensated? What is a fatal mistake I see people make with investing? In this episode of retirement made easy, I answer these listener questions so that you can be well-educated about your advisor—and your investments.
You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...What is a fiduciary? Why would you need one? Do I recommend working with a fiduciary? A fiduciary is someone that acts on the behalf of another person/people and puts their best interests ahead of his or her own. A fiduciary is both ethically AND legally responsible for their actions. Because of this, a fiduciary can be sued if they’re found to be negligent in their duties. The legal aspect holds them accountable.
A simple example of a fiduciary is the legal guardian of a child. They make financial decisions on the child’s behalf and they’re responsible for their well-being. Fiduciaries can be financial advisors as well. I wouldn’t work with a financial advisor that wasn’t a fiduciary. I am a fiduciary and make sure prospective clients know that I have their best interests in mind. If I won’t put my money in something, I wouldn’t put yours in it either.
Three ways financial advisors get compensatedThere are three ways financial advisors can charge for their services:
We meet with clients annually or semi-annually to show them their progress, update their retirement plan, etc. The clients that I get who were under a compensation-based agreement with their advisor never spoke with them. There was very little service after the sale (in my personal experience).
Keep portion control in mindIn 2008, someone called me who said they were the brother of a client. They wanted to cash out their 401k and put it all into GM stock (because it was at an all-time low). They were certain that GM would be bailed out. But I don’t believe in all-or-nothing thinking. I told them if they were dead-set on doing it to only use a small portion of their 401k. He didn’t follow my advice.
Remember what happened? GM went to zero. They filed for bankruptcy. This guy put his life savings into GM stock and he lost everything. Never ever dump your entire nest egg into one thing. You need to abandon the all-or-nothing way of thinking. You can always sell a portion of something—it doesn’t have to be it all. Rethink the “go big or go home” mentality. Exercise portion control into your investment strategy.
Connect With Gregg GonzalezSubscribe to Retirement Made EasyOn Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts
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