I am in
contact with some investor advocates and am shocked that things are still
happening that I hoped would disappear or at the very least be very infrequent
events by this point in time. Investors are still being ripped off by rogue
financial advisors; clients are still buying DSC mutual funds and still
borrowing to invest when they shouldn’t. These are three of the most common
problems plaguing the financial services sector.
1. Rogue ‘Financial Advisors’
There are a
number of things you can do (or look for) to ensure that you never get put in
the position of losing your nest egg to an unscrupulous ‘financial advisor’;
Don’t EVER
sign a cheque to your ‘financial advisor’. Always to the firm or fund company.
That way you will have the company’s protection if things go sideways. If you
sign a cheque to your ‘financial advisor ‘he will deposit it into his own bank
and it won’t go through the companies normal processing so they will be unaware
of its existence. If it goes through their system they have a record of it and
can probably rectify the situation. Is he living an extravagant lifestyle? That
can be a sign. Sometimes where people get too successful. they feel they are
untouchable.
2. To DSC or NOT DSC?
Why are
people still buying DSC mutual funds when they essentially lock you into a fund
company for 6-7 years, unless you pay the penalties for early redemption? Don’t
invest with a Front End (FE/or ISC) Option that takes away 1-5% of your
investment before the starting line either. ONLY invest FE 0% to give you full
flexibility.
There is
NO advantage to purchasing mutual fund with the DSC option. It limits your
flexibility and costs you money if you redeem early or move to another fund
company.
If your
Financial Advisor forces you to decide between DSC and FE 3-5% for example,
look for somebody else or go to the bank until you find somebody that offers
that option. Banks and credit unions always offer FE 0%.
The DSC
option should go the way of the dinosaurs in my opinion. The ONLY time I would
OK its use is if you are working with a newly licenced advisor and he needs to
use it to stay in business while he build his practice. The option does provide
more immediate income to the financial advisor.
3. Borrowing to Invest (Leveraging)
This is
the most over used strategy in the industry and I saw it abused many times
while at investors Group where the use of it was promoted frequently as a
method of earning more money and growing your book of assets faster, but at
whose expense?
Only examine this strategy IF; you have a good/steady job, you
maximize your RRSP’s every year, your home is paid off or you have a very low
small mortgage, high income(s) and you have no debt. I have seen too many
people come to me who borrowed $100,000 only to have it sitting at $65000 after
a correction and are upset about the method in which the leverage was sold to them.
Most
people can deal with a loss IF one of your potential scenarios showed a 30%-40%
loss one year. The problem is that most projections show a steady 7% growth
rate and the numbers all look very rosy and
unrealistic.NO markets or investments rise as a steady 7% year after year. Every
10 years you will see a major correction and illustrations should reflect that
reality.
Trust your Gut
If your
gut is telling you something, listen to it.If the numbers sound too good to be
true they likely are. If you have had investments work well (or not) for many
years and somebody (often a new financial advisor but not always) advises a
drastic change, check with your accountant or another financial planner/advisor
to get a second opinion. Don’t put everything in the same investment. Stay
diversified with different bonds, and both Canadian and foreign equities. Don’t
rush into anything.
Don’t move
forward if you feel pressured or must make a quick decision. I read recently
about a gentleman who owned a business and had about 2 million invested and
made a change (Exempt Market product I think) and within’ 3 months lost
everything and was forced to sell his cottage to stay afloat. He was coasting
along wanting for nothing after a successful career and ONE mistake changed his
position dramatically and it will never go back to where it was.
All it
takes is ONE big error and you’re in trouble. Make sure you (or your
parents/grandparents) don’t make it.Nobody needs that stress, especially when
you’re retired.
NOTE: The views expressed here represent the views of Mr. Loeppky and do not necessarily coincide with our position. We thought it important to allow advisors to let their voice be heard.