Hi dubnerdMost of that sounds ok to me, except: if an adviser only did fact-finding on a first meeting, I'd worry that he's fishing around for how much he can get out of me. I like the idea of "educate as you advise" -- education would be my primary objective in talking to an adviser. I don't expect him to make any actual decisions. I want to know what he knows, and take it from there myself. "Life Assurance is the foundation of all good plans" -- this sound like an over-generalisation. I wouldn't have the slightest interest in, or use for, life assurance.
dub-nerd.Most of that sounds ok to me, except: if an adviser only did fact-finding on a first meeting, I'd worry that he's fishing around for how much he can get out of me. I like the idea of "educate as you advise" -- education would be my primary objective in talking to an adviser. I don't expect him to make any actual decisions. I want to know what he knows, and take it from there myself. "Life Assurance is the foundation of all good plans" -- this sound like an over-generalisation. I wouldn't have the slightest interest in, or use for, life assurance.
dub-nerd.
as Pad-Kiss says rapport is all important ..............not important to client and can be construed as nosiness..
I want back to an advisor after many years and an unknown (to me) accounting technician sent out docs and ask me to complete which were very intrusive..........personal touch gone and so was I.
Hi Stephen,Galwegian44, are you going directly to the banks/ life companies all the time?
Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
Hi Stephen,
No, I went to the BOI Financial Advisor as a courtesy to my BOI Business Advisor without expecting much. However, I was hugely impressed by the depth of his knowledge in relation to my questions but the hook is that his advice is obviously skewed towards BOI products. His approach was very similar to what you outlined as your approach in another thread on AAM.
My second foray was with a financial services company through a recommendation from my business partner and unfortunately this gentleman proved to be next to worthless.
Finally I talked to an independent financial advisor recommended by my company accountant and she was somewhere in between. I went ahead and opened the pension just before year-end, transferred the money but I'm not confident in her ability to guide me to the best investment.
My primary issue is that I don't have enough confidence in my own ability to predict the optimal investment in the current economic climate with:
- Japan continuing its experiment with the most radical quantitative easing program
- Europe still on a knife edge with a possible Greece exit, Italy & france in serious trouble and Draghi/Merkel fighting over a possible EU QE program
- China potentially heading into recession or at least a "hard landing" as it reduces its dependency on debt and the subsequent impact on emerging markets
- Russia has tumbled into a full-fledged currency crisis
- At current valuations the US stock market is due a correction......but when?
- potential for a global currency war as the EUR/USD rate drops to 1.17 and the JPY/USD rate goes to 120
- the recent history of property investment downturn in Ireland
- gold doesn't even react to all the above crisis situations by appreciating
So maybe I'm looking for too much from a financial advisor (as another poster mentioned) in calmly assessing the financial mess that we are in on a global basis and pointing me to an investment plan that will generate high single digit returns with minimal risk. Or I could just leave the money on deposit!!!!
All the best.
Thanks Stephen, I feel that I've been to a few quacks recently!!
I would appreciate your thoughts on investing in a Structured Product (basket of 12 equities - 4 UK, 5 USA, 1 Macau, 1 China, 1 Canada) for a recently opened pension. With the expected volatility from my list of worldly woes above my primary aim is capital security but I'm a bit reticent to commit to a 6 year investment as I would like to be liquid when market conditions settle over the next few years (if they do). I'm not sure if I'm allowed to name the product on AAM.
This Protected Income Bond has 100% capital protection which applies at maturity only. My understanding of this (if correct) is that the investor invests 100,000 euros. So the issuer invests in a risk free bond that has sufficient interest to grow to 100,000 euros after the six year period. This bond might cost 80,000 euros today and after six years it will grow to 100,000 euros. With the leftover funds (20,000 euros) the issuer purchases the options and swaps etc needed to perform whatever the investment strategy is......and hopefully makes a profit!
Thanks in advance.
Run a mile. The only people who make money off them is the promoter and he gets paid up front. By it's very nature, there is risk when buying equities, so when someone tells you there is none, there is something wrong.
Who is the bond with? I would suspect there are a few more catches to it such as limited return or maybe if the fund falls by a certain amount, the guarantee is off. Or all 12 of the equities have to perform, if just 11 hit their target, you just get your money back.
Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
Interestingly enough it is the independent financial advisor who is pushing me towards a structured product. I bumped into the BOI financial advisor a few days ago when I was in the bank and he echoed your comments above - stay away from structured products primarily because too much of it is invested to secure the capital guarantee.
"If you go to the doctor, you could be talking to the guy who came top of the class or the guy who came bottom of the class. Both are still doctors. Same with financial advisors, some of them do little more than fill in proposal forms.
Interestingly enough it is the independent financial advisor who is pushing me towards a structured product. I bumped into the BOI financial advisor a few days ago when I was in the bank and he echoed your comments above - stay away from structured products primarily because too much of it is invested to secure the capital guarantee.
I thought I could provide a link to the details of the product (Protected Income Bond 2) from Blackbee.ie but you have to register to access the details. I will review my hardcopy brochure again to see if I can identify potential downsides as identified above. However, I agreed with Dub Nerd that even if these 'catches' don't exist the product cannot guarantee my capital AND expose me to decent equity returns as well.
Thanks guys.
What I find most strange about the whole area is the idea that if a client comes into the office with €10k to invest there are lots of rules and regulations about the products that can be offered.
If a client comes in and says they want to borrow €100k to buy a property there is no regulations and this is even worse where property is syndicated by advisors completely unregulated.
As a rule if think that clients are suspicious of people who provide advice for "free" ie whose commission is paid by the insurance company.
Past Reputation
There are a lot of financial advisors who are highly qualified and who work in the best interests of their clients. Look for testimonials on their websites to see what their clients think of their work.
Steven Barrett
19 January 2015
Joe, I also agree on the "free" advice. If it is made clear to a client that they can pay by fee or commission and the differences between the two options in respect of management charges etc, then they can make their own mind up. Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
I sometimes wonder If one pays the fee, could he also end up with a commission based produce with the advisor assuring him/her that "all things being considered, at the end of the day" this is the most appropriate product..........so he pays twice
Great post Stephen, it's good to see a Financial Adviser/Planner actually ask the public what type of service they want. In relation to 'Past Reputation' I'm not a big fan of Testimonials as I've never seen a bad one on a website yet. Personally, I would prefer to see some Case Studies of what you did for particular clients and the process you used. For example, a SME Director comes into your office to set up a self-employed pension and knows very little about the process and the charges involved. How would you approach this initially, through to setting up the pension, choosing products etc
Also, blog posts on the current products that you feel would be good investments because of economic changes i.e. will the proposed EU Quantitative Easing program drive up European equity prices so products in this area should be favoured? Are there ways to take advantage of the weakening of the USD againg the Euro. If we assume oil prices have hit rock bottom what products are available to enable us to take advantage of an increase over the next 12 - 24 months?
Thanks.
My biggest gripe is wasting time with financial advisers who do not know the products they are selling, have little knowledge of the markets they are recommending and cannot discuss future prospects even at a basic level. I, (like most people on this forum) try to be proactive and knowledgeable about my financial planning and it is extremely frustrating to talk to qualified financial advisors who obviously know little about the financial environment beyond the top superficial layer.
I talked to three advisors recently regarding pension planning and one had absolutely no idea, he just parroted the info on the data sheets that he presented to me and could not even answer some basic questions. The second person had a better understanding and was more experienced but really struggled to advise me or explain the differences between the various products. Interestingly this person was a previous winner of the Champion Sales Advisor/Consultant – Financial Services category of the Irish Sales Champion Awards - go figure! Any discussion regarding general observations/trends (e.g. the USA Equity market is way overvalued and should be avoided) was met with a blank stare. The third advisor certainly seemed competent and most definitely knew way more than I did (I spent a few weeks researching on the internet, including AAM) but was tied to the BOI.
Now that the pension has been started I would like to withdraw my savings from minimum paying deposit accounts and look for a better return but the thought of hitting the financial advisor trail again is really putting me off.
Any recommendations?
Thanks in advance.
If you started your pension are you happy with this?
What do you want from your investment and what do you expect from your financial adviser?
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