Re: re Hanrahan
Notwithstanding the fact that there have been obvious cases of misselling, arguably misleading advertising (e.g. those convoluted tracker bond and deposit/tracker bond products) and that people have to be on their guard about being pressurised/rushed into inappropriate investment decisions, I have to agree with you on the point about people ultimately needing to take responsibility for their own decisions - something that I mentioned and . Unfortunately, it seems that we still have a long way to go before people are interested, motivated and informed enough to systematically review their financial situation, investment goals/timeframe, attitude to risk/volatility, overall "portfolio" etc. for themselves and to understand the financial products available to them, and in particular the risk/potential rewards tradeoffs involved, before buying into them. In fact many (most?) people will never fall into this category regardless of how much information is made available to them as evidenced, for example, by the reaction of some people that charges disclosure information is a burden rather than a help to them, the repetition of queries along the lines of "I have €x - what is the best product" here on AAM, and so on. As such, many people will continue to rely on third parties for savings/investment advice (hopefully objective and independent and not their friendly local bank teller or other tied agent or whatever) but they need to understand that once they sign on the dotted line it is they who have made the decision and that there is no point in blaming somebody else if/when things don't turn out as expected (something I know only too well myself! :\ ).