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Financial 'advice' a scam.

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I figured this out a few years ago but now some of the 'insiders' are saying the same thing. Bottom line: The fees you pay for financial advice are huge and the financial advice you get isn't worth it.

"... the BCT study found that the raw returns of equally weighted mutual funds (net of all expenses) for 1996 to 2002 were 6.626% for the investors working on their own and were 2.924% for funds provided by advisors." - Daniel Moine, Research Scientist

"A vast industry of stockbrokers, financial planners, and investment advisers skims a fortune for themselves off the top in exchange for passing their clients' money on to people who, as a whole, cannot possibly outperform the market." - Michael Lewis, Conde Nast Portfolio, The Evolution of an Investor

"Investment managers sell for the price of a Picasso [what] routinely turns out to be paint-by-number sofa art." - Dunn, Patricia C., CEO, Barclays Global Advisors

"It is not easy to get rich in Las Vegas, at Churchill Downs or at the local Merrill Lynch office." - Samuelson, Paul A. , Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Economist, Nobel Laureate in Economics

"Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny should take a few pointers from the mutual-fund industry [and it's fund managers]. All three are trying to pull off elaborate hoaxes." - Jonathan Clements, Wall Street Journal

Warren Buffett wrote about this:
http://money.cnn.com/2006/03/05/news/newsmakers/buffett_fortune/index.htm

Please, if you use a 'financial advisor' (probably a product salesman/broker) find out about ALL the fees you pay. Including the expense ratio for your funds, the load or wrap fee (percent of assets) you are paying, cost of turnover within your funds (that's not included in the expense ratio)and get it all in writing. Figure out the dollar amount you are paying every month. Would you write a check for that amount?

Consider that the safe withdrawal rate in retirement is considered to be 4%. (This is what you can safely withdraw from your investments and not run out of money before you die). It's typical for clients to pay 2 - 3% of their investments in wrap, commission and fund fees. What does that leave the retiree? Not much.

We're all so careful with our budgets, but because we do not directly pay for fund costs and so-called 'advice' (it comes out of our investment accounts with no full accounting) we don't think about fees that add up to tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Let's look at the impact of fees, over time, on your nestegg. The table below (used by FINRA/NASD to educate investors) assumes you invest $2,000 on January 1st of each year and earn a 10% rate of return before deducting fees.

The Balance after 5 Years 10 Years 20 Years 30 Years 40 Years

Mgmt. Fee @ 0.02% $13,423 $35,022 $125,696 $360,454 $968,249

Mgmt. Fee @ 0.25% $13,334 $34,556 $122,204 $344,402 $907,762

Mgmt. Fee @ 0.50% $13,238 $34,077 $118,528 $327,816 $846,479

Mgmt. Fee @ 1.00% $13,047 $33,121 $111,529 $297,150 $736,584

Mgmt. Fee @ 2.00% $12,672 $31,291 $98,846 $244,692 $559,562

Mgmt. Fee @ 3.00% $12,307 $29,567 $87,730 $202,146 $427,219

Think about the numbers on this table. It is common for people to be paying 2, 3 and even 4% in combined mutual fund and advising costs. If your investments are costing 3.00%, your nestegg will be some $541,000 lower after 40 years than if you used low-fee investments and did your own investing. How many years of retirement is that? Shouldn't a Financial ADVISOR be showing his clients this chart? But they do not. Did yours?

This shows you how to use Morningstar to look up fund costs:

http://www.saveyournestegg.com/costs.html

Please find out about your fees, especially if your 'advisor' is a trusted friend or relative. You were their 'natural market'...an easy target.

Thanks for listening!! I'm very concerned about what will happen to people in retirement that are paying all these fees and people working towards retirement that are losing YEARS of that retirement to fees.

Edited to add some further reading:

Through fascinating and sometimes humorous anecdotes and straightforward explanations of investment theory and scientific evidence, Edesess reveals just how badly investors are being scammed by The Big Investment Lie. He examines how the master salespeople that make up the industry sell their cleverly concocted distortions of truth--to the tune of $200 billion a year--to unsuspecting consumers who swallow them hook, line and sinker.

http://www.bkconnection.com/ProdDetails.asp?ID=9781576754078

Never mind Enron—corruption, fraud and towering incompetence are Wall Street's daily bread and butter, insists this lively j'accuse. Ex-BusinessWeek reporter Weiss (Born to Steal: When the Mafia Hit Wall Street) details the myriad ways the financial industry preys on small investors. Scraping the bottom are the boiler-room operators who peddle worthless microcap stocks over the phone and the "paid research" outfits hired by companies to tout their stocks under the guise of independent analysis. But the author finds plenty of chicanery at the pinnacle of Wall Street probity, blue-chip mutual funds, which, he contends, charge exorbitant fees and pay kickbacks to brokers to steer customers their way—while yielding a markedly worse return than market indexes.

http://www.Amazon.com/Wall-Street-Versus-America-Investments/dp/B000N3T4PG/ref=pd_bxgy_b_img_b

Many investors purchase mutual funds through intermediated channels, paying brokers or financial advisors for fund selection and advice. This paper attempts to quantify the benefits that investors enjoy in exchange for the costs of these services. We study broker-sold and direct-sold funds from 1996 to 2004, and fail to find that brokers deliver substantial tangible benefits. Relative to direct-sold funds, broker-sold funds deliver lower risk-adjusted returns, even before subtracting distribution costs. These results hold across fund objectives, with the exception of foreign equity funds. Further, broker-sold funds exhibit no more skill at aggregate-level asset allocation than do funds sold through the direct channel. Our results are consistent either with substantial non-tangible benefits delivered by the broker-distributed sector or with conflicts of interest between brokers and their clients.

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=616981

Message edited by: nobrokers on 2008-03-31 08:57:52 CDT

http://nobrokers.savingadvice.com/

Addition from nobrokers: There are a handful of people on this site that are trying to discredit me. I have already exposed several things they have said about me that simply are not true and have spent much time in useless arguments with them. My intention now is to ignore the detractors personal attacks and trust in the good judgement of the readers. I will continue to post any information I find that may be helpful in exposing the financial advice industry and helping investors.

I apologise to everyone that this thread has gotten so out of hand. Thanks very much for the positive votes and a big thank you to all that have visited www.saveyournestegg.com and found it not to be a scam at all, as my detractors have claimed in their own thread, but a free site that teaches people how to look up their own fund costs and returns, how to do their own investing and provides many links to helpful resources. It also exposes what the financial advice industry is doing to their clients.

I wish you all a very successful financial future.


ellory said:

Galun000, Personally, I am finding that this repetitive posting is

a) getting old
b) adding nothing to the conversation
c) tiresome

While I do not agree with all the details of nobrokers posts, I believe the intent and spirit is right on. i.e that there are many in the financial industry that charge unjustified fees that add little or no value. And that those parties intentionally over complicate and confuse in order to retain their customer base.

Does this apply to all financial advisers and funds? No. But, there was a time, not too long ago, when there were only "full service brokers" because the individual was "not smart enough" to invest on their own.

As for me, there was a period of time when I had an advisory service and my company paid the bill. I took some advice, ignored others. Then my company stopped paying, and I kept them for a year. And then fired their ass. Too much coasting, too much generic advice, and the fees were just not justified by any returns they could produce over what I could do on my own. (And this is a while respected, high end advisory service). Not saying that's true for everyone, but the discussion of fees, intentional obfuscation, and what you need to retire is spot on

Does nobrokers bring a point of view? Yes. But what's a dialog without a point of view.

Please don't dismiss this valuable discussion


Galun000 said:To the new readers of this thread, consider the following when you read the OP's (nobrokers) posts.

I will continue to put this close to the top of new pages in order to warn new readers.

    Many had called her out on her many problematic arguments throughout this thread and another thread.


    She had a tendancy to selectively answer parts of the arguments and take things out of context, and ignore the core issues that others had call her out on.


    When she could not answer the questions / arguments, she calimed that people were baiting her to respond.


    Then, when others provided more direct evidence and arguments against her, including her own quotes, she had no response and had to resort to calling names, among other things.


    For example, she called me a liar when I made arguments using her own words, and followed her advice (called Vanguard) and got answers COMPLETELY CONTRARY to her claims.


    She had been caught at least twice for the lack of understanding of basic financial concepts (1: performance before and after fees; 2: the definition of basis point).


    You will see her use plenty of quotes from her to support her arguments. Note that she had been caught at least once for quoting something from the internet that she had absolutely no clue about, in order to support her argument.


    She believes there is a conspiracy against her from getting her message out to the public - that was her response when others made arguments that she could not refute. To that I say, don't stoke the fire if you can't handle the heat.



All of the points about the OP can be referenced back to actual posts if needed.

She will most likey not respond to any of the points above. She simply cannot dispute any of them, because they are facts, scattered throughout this thread and other threads. The silence speaks for itself.

When you read posts from the OP (nobrokers), you are reading advice from someone who had a strong personal bias, who made multiple mistakes on simple financial concepts, and had to resort to diversionary tactics and name calling when she ended up in the losing end of valid arguments and discussions. Please keep this in mind.


ellory said:Galun000, Personally, I am finding that this repetitive posting is

a) getting old
b) adding nothing to the conversation
c) tiresome

While I do not agree with all the details of nobrokers posts, I believe the intent and spirit is right on. i.e that there are many in the financial industry that charge unjustified fees that add little or no value. And that those parties intentionally over complicate and confuse in order to retain their customer base.

Does this apply to all financial advisers and funds? No. But, there was a time, not too long ago, when there were only "full service brokers" because the individual was "not smart enough" to invest on their own.

As for me, there was a period of time when I had an advisory service and my company paid the bill. I took some advice, ignored others. Then my company stopped paying, and I kept them for a year. And then fired their ass. Too much coasting, too much generic advice, and the fees were just not justified by any returns they could produce over what I could do on my own. (And this is a while respected, high end advisory service). Not saying that's true for everyone, but the discussion of fees, intentional obfuscation, and what you need to retire is spot on

Does nobrokers bring a point of view? Yes. But what's a dialog without a point of view.

Please don't dismiss this valuable discussion

Message edited by: nobrokers on 2008-04-02 14:15:02 CDT
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This is just a bunch of cut-and-pasted crap from all over the internet. Can't you write an article yourself?

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Why do you want to attack me for trying to get an inmportant message out to people? Did you even think about what I wrote? Do you have an honest rebuttal or just a nasty personal attack?

I think it's important to back up what I say with numbers and studies and quotes from people with a lot of experience in the field.

(Whoops, I see that you are permanently cranky. Never mind. Consider yourself ignored.)

Addition: There are a handful of people on this site that are trying to discredit me. I have already exposed several things they have said about me that simply are not true and have spent much time in useless arguments with them. My intention now is to ignore the detractors and trust in the good judgement of the readers. I will continue to post any information I find that may be helpful in exposing the financial advice industry and helping investors.

I apologise to everyone that this thread has gotten so out of hand. Thanks very much and a big thank you to all that have visited www.saveyournestegg.com and found it not to be a scam at all, as my detractors have claimed, but a free site that teaches people how to look up their own fund costs and returns, how to do their own investing and provides many links to helpful resources. It also exposes what the financial advice industry is doing to their clients.

I wish you all a very successful financial future.

Message edited by: nobrokers on 2008-03-28 19:38:30 CDT
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nobrokers said:Why do you want to attack me for trying to get an inmportant message out to people?
Don't red posters you disagree with. Compensatory green.

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This is not a smart way to look at this situation. While there's absolutely no question that "an honest financial planner" is pretty much the oxymoron and majority of their recommendations is influenced not by interest on the client, but by the % they get back, their "advice" is still better than the majority of American public can do on their own. C'mon, most people can't manage their CC usage and don't understand Finance 101 for crying out loud!! And you want them to invest their retirement money without any advice??!

Solution to this situation would be using a flat-fee adviser, not do it by themselves.

BTW, individual investors outperform financial advisors only because people who understand market and investment vehicles do so, if you let regular Joe do that he will not be better off

Message edited by: CrazierRus on 2008-03-12 17:54:58 CDT
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"but by the % they get back, their "advice" is still better than the majority of American public can do on their own."

You would think so, but this doesn't seem to be the case. Again:

"A landmark study from Harvard Business School/University of Oregon concludes that when it comes to the selection of mutual funds, individual investors outperform financial advisors by 100%, amounting to 8.8 billion annually." - advisorroundtable

"... the BCT study found that the raw returns of equally weighted mutual funds (net of all expenses) for 1996 to 2002 were 6.626% for the investors working on their own and were 2.924% for funds provided by advisors." - Daniel Moine, Research Scientist

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=616981 - The study

So, using a 'financial advisor' will get you much lower returns. As far as I know, there is no rebuttal and other studies are using this study as a resource.

Also found in the study:

"4. Do advisors provide superior asset allocation? After years of research covering trillions of
dollars of asset allocations, the finding is that advisors do not provide superior asset
allocation. Even without this study, one only had to look at how advisors overemphasized
technology funds in the late 1990s and how many advisors are overemphasizing energy,
gold, and foreign funds today.

5. Do advisors help correct bad investor behavior such as chasing fads and chasing
performance? The sobering answer is no. In fact, the evidence shows that advisors even
contribute to such behavior. Again, look at all the money advisors are pouring into energy,
gold, and foreign funds."

http://trendfollowing.com/whitepaper/The%20Study%20of%20the%20Decade.pdf

This study looked at funds sold through the broker channel(banks, advice givers, RIAs, IARs,
broker-dealers, mutual fund wrap accounts, wire houses and captive agents) and funds sold directly to investors who buy mutual funds directly, on their own, or through no-load fund supermarkets. So, this study is looking at anyone buying funds, including 'regular Joe's'. Remember that 'regular Joe's can now buy Target Retirement Date funds for a very low cost.

The solution is to learn to do your own investing and if that is not possible for some reason, buy a low-cost retirement date fund (index funds), If that's not possible, then I agree - using someone that charges by the hour or a one time flat fee is best. Hopefully you will find someone that knows what they are doing.

BTW, I do my own investing and it's easy. There are plenty of free tools available and excellent articles and books available and...it is NOT hard to do. I spend less than 8 hours A YEAR on my investments.

I am heartsick when I see what brokers parading as 'financial advisors' are doing to people.

Think about it - Conflicts of interest, 12b-1 fees, soft dollars, revenue sharing, ongoing % of ALL assets charged no matter the performance, money taken directly from investment accounts with no full accounting, hidden fees, expensive actively managed funds, high fund turnover, churning, inappropriate products sold all over the place (like VULs), the BS marketing of 'fiduciary', RIAs, lack of education, the fund scandals, putting stockholders ahead of client interests, surrender fees to get out of horrible products, 'fake it till you make it', 'professionals' underperforming DIY-ers and charging a huge amount to do so, the mess of fees charged in 401ks and the consequences, the hard selling of products, hedge funds, terrible asset allocations, market timing, chasing past returns, manipulating clients, scripts, firms hiring kids with no experience to get to their natural market, 'advisors' that are really salesmen that sell what they are told to sell and never think of comparing products, survivorship bias, and on and on and on. It's a scam.

I have been looking at this from the client's side for years and I've spent years looking at portfolios and helping people (FOR FREE!!!) learn about their investments. I have seen FIRST HAND how the industry operates.

That there may be rare exceptions to the rule (some fee-ONLY) does not make the industry less of a scam.

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nobrokers said:n:

"A landmark study from Harvard Business School/University of Oregon concludes that when it comes to the selection of mutual funds, individual investors outperform financial advisors by 100%, amounting to 8.8 billion annually." - advisorroundtable

This study and you are missing one point - all these individual investors are people with knowledge and understanding of the market, not average Joe. If you let a Joe to invest his own money without ANY advice it's quite possible that he'll end up with zero

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"This study and you are missing one point - all these individual investors are people with knowledge and understanding of the market, not average Joe."

What do you base that conclusion on? This study isn't quizzing anyone about investment knowledge and eliminating those that don't have knowledge and understanding of the market.

"If you let a Joe to invest his own money without ANY advice it's quite possible that he'll end up with zero "

If you mean advice from a 'financial advisor' it's way more possible that he'll end up with better returns than those using 'financial advisors'. It isn't either/or. There are plenty of places to get excelent advice for free. An average Joe could buy a low-cost target retirement date fund made up of index funds, leave it alone for 30 - 40 years and beat the pants off the vast majority of 'advised' clients.

http://money.cnn.com/2006/03/05/news/newsmakers/buffett_fortune/index.htm

I'm providing important information to investors. I have never, ever met an investor that knows all the fees they are paying for 'advice' or fund expenses let alone knows what those fees add up to every month. None have a clue that 3% is going to eat away at their nest egg over time. "Advisors' don't give out that information. I'm trying to get that information out to people. I'm showing them how to look up fund costs and returns. FOR FREE. You should be thanking me. Really.

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nobrokers said:"This study and you are missing one point - all these individual investors are people with knowledge and understanding of the market, not average Joe."

What do you base that conclusion on? This study isn't quizzing anyone about investment knowledge and eliminating those that don't have knowledge and understanding of the market.

It's a self-selection bias. If you look at everyone who changes their own oil versus those who get it done somewhere, you will find a higher proportion of mechanically inclined who know about automobiles in the former group than the latter.

There's nothing preventing the mechanically inept from changing their own oil, but they usually choose to get it done for them.

In Epi/Biostat terms we have an observational study with an unmeasured confounder (market education). That makes it good for observing that people who choose to go it on their own do better on average than people who have managed funds, but falls way short of offering any causality.

Message edited by: s1235 on 2008-03-12 21:59:56 CDT
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Then can we conclude that people taking their cars in to mechanics have problems with their oil filters much, much more often than people that change their own oil? That sure doesn't say much for the mechanics who are supposed to be the experts.

I would add that when you get your oil changed the mechanic doesn't have access to your investment accounts, pulling money out without giving a full acounting of what you are being charged for oil.

Really, look at these returns!!
"the BCT study found that the raw returns of equally weighted mutual funds
(net of all expenses) for 1996 to 2002 were 6.626% for the investors working on their
own and were 2.924% for funds provided by advisors.

In other words, the public working on its own did more than 100% better than financial
advisors when it came to selecting equity mutual funds. After factoring in inflation and
taxes, clients of financial advisors lost money and lost purchasing power."

http://trendfollowing.com/whitepaper/The%20Study%20of%20the%20Decade.pdf

We all talk about how people don't have enough saved for retirement...well, look at the returns 'professionals' are getting for their clients!

'Financial Advisors' are usually selling products, have little or no proper investment education, do have many conflicts of interest with their clients, charge high fees and get poor returns, manipulate and outright lie to their clients and are unable to predict the future any better than you can - which is not at all. So, you are paying high fees to a salesman and fund managers who will help you lose potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars over time but love to talk about your 'dreams' - which they are delaying by years.

If you want to use one, that's fine. But I think the public should be informed about this so they can look at their own costs and returns. If they can find them:
"The study finds that 43 percent of the funds’ expenses are omitted from their expense ratios and that the transaction costs of some funds exceed 400 percent of their expense ratios." - Zero Alpha Group

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CrazierRus said:This is not a smart way to look at this situation. While there's absolutely no question that "an honest financial planner" is pretty much the oxymoron and majority of their recommendations is influenced not by interest on the client, but by the % they get back, their "advice" is still better than the majority of American public can do on their own. C'mon, most people can't manage their CC usage and don't understand Finance 101 for crying out loud!! And you want them to invest their retirement money without any advice??!Those are the kinds of people who tend to invest with the worst financial planners. I don't see any way to choose a good planner without learning enough to be able to handle investments on your own.

Solution to this situation would be using a flat-fee adviser, not do it by themselves.Several years ago, I read that fee-only planners tended to be more honest than planners who work on comission, but some fee-only planners charge $3,000 - $8,000 to create a financial plan or tack on a fee of 1% of assets per year. And when the Washington Post surveyed 100-200 planners who claimed to be fee-only, they found that 90% were not, so any investor should get the method of compensation in writing. Then there are fee-based planners, who try to give people the impression that they're fee-only, but in reality they can and do charge comissions, usually in addition to hourly or asset-based rates (there's a local one on radio who once went bankrupt ).

BTW, individual investors outperform financial advisors only because people who understand market and investment vehicles do so, if you let regular Joe do that he will not be better offDalbar once published a study showing that people did better with planners, but I think Dalbar makes most of its money from advisers, and people who invest through advisors tend to be much more passive and invest regularly, rather than try to time the market or chase after the hottest funds or stocks. However other studies have said that people were better off investing on their own, the advantage roughly equalling the extra costs charged by advisors.

Message edited by: larrymoencurly on 2008-03-13 00:56:31 CDT
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nobrokers said:
Really, look at these returns!!
"the BCT study found that the raw returns of equally weighted mutual funds
(net of all expenses) for 1996 to 2002 were 6.626% for the investors working on their
own and were 2.924% for funds provided by advisors.

Point estimates get us nowhere. Variance is key here, particularly for the risk averse. One person winning a million dollars and another 999 losing $100 has a higher expected value than giving everyone $9.

The problem with the oil change analogy is that mechanics don't siphon off a bit to pay themselves. If the average financial adviser charges 3.5%, then the two are basically a wash- the experts do as well as those who choose to do it themselves. However, since there is potential selection bias, you can't categorically state that everyone should go it alone and the fee isn't ever worth it.

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"Those are the kinds of people who tend to invest with the worst financial planners. I don't see any way to choose a good planner without learning enough to be able to handle investments on your own."

Exactly. And every client I've ever met would have given their broker glowing reviews before I explained what they were paying in fees (most of them thought they were paying NO fees) and how their investments were doing as compared to the PROPER benchmark.

I've read several articles about how 'fee-based' pretend to be 'fee-only'. There is a world of difference.

"Dalbar once published a study showing that people did better with planners,"

I remember that study. It compared people that were ACTIVE investors (market timers) with people using 'financial advisors'. The financial advisors won by a slight margin but I think that may not have considered loads/wrap fee. The study concluded that people who simply bought index funds and held them had the highest returns of all.

"people who invest through advisors tend to be much more passive and invest regularly, rather than try to time the market or chase after the hottest funds or stocks."

That's what we all thought, but it turns out that isn't the case: "5. Do advisors help correct bad investor behavior such as chasing fads and chasing performance? The sobering answer is no. In fact, the evidence shows that advisors even contribute to such behavior. Again, look at all the money advisors are pouring into energy, gold, and foreign funds."

I've interviewed many 'financial advisors' and none suggested index funds. In fact, they recommended against them. In a wrap account you may get ETFs and index funds, but the wrap fee ruins the low-cost aspect.

Also: "Investors who buy index mutual funds through brokers are paying a steep “broker penalty” by being sold funds with much higher operating expense fees even before adding the distribution fees related to the cost of using the broker, according to a major new study by the Zero Alpha Group (ZAG) and Fund Democracy. The bottom line for investors: The extra operating costs paid over time for broker-sold load index funds are triple those paid by investors in true no-load mutual funds." - Zero Alpha Group

BTW, the BCT study I refer to ('Assessing the Costs and Benefits of Brokers in the Mutual Fund Industry') was funded by MIT and Harvard. The authors are DANIEL BERGSTRESSER, Harvard Business School, JOHN M.R. CHALMERS, University of Oregon, PETER TUFANO, Harvard Business School; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). All are well-respected. They had had the cooperation and support of some of the largest and most respected industry groups and research organizations in America. Morningstar and Financial Research Corporation contributed data - a LOT of data. Staff members of the Investment Company Institute and representatives of various mutual fund companies assisted the authors. The study started out with a bias - in FAVOR of 'financial advisors'.

The study concludes: "Many investors purchase mutual funds through intermediated channels, paying brokers or financial advisors for fund selection and advice. This paper attempts to quantify the benefits that investors enjoy in exchange for the costs of these services. We study broker-sold and direct-sold funds from 1996 to 2004, and fail to find that brokers deliver substantial tangible benefits. Relative to direct-sold funds, broker-sold funds deliver lower risk-adjusted returns, even before subtracting distribution costs. These results hold across fund objectives, with the exception of foreign equity funds. Further, broker-sold funds exhibit no more skill at aggregate-level asset allocation than do funds sold through the direct channel. Our results are consistent either with substantial non-tangible benefits delivered by the broker-distributed sector or with conflicts of interest between brokers and their clients."

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=616981

Sadly, no 'financial advisor' will be showing this study to their clients. I have yet to see any face up to the facts and commit to making a change in the way they do business. No 'financial advisor', with the possible exception of some true fee-ONLY advisors, will be digging up all the costs to the clients and explaining them explicitly and showing what those fees do to the nest egg. It's a real shame that slick salesmen, well trained in how to manipulate and gain trust and SELL THAT PRODUCT/MEET THAT QUOTA are allowed to represent themselves as 'financial advisors'. I get to see the end result of it all...lost years of retirement, inappropriate and very expensive products sold with huge and ongoing surrender fees, the client's disbelief and then disgust at themselves for falling for such a scam and trusting someone that has hurt them badly. The good news is that these clients learn that investing is not hard. They go through the stages I did...panic at the thought of having to handle their own investments, overwhelmed by all the information, starting to realize they are making it harder than it needs to be, excitement at GETTING IT!, growing confidence and then....success. As hard as it is being there for that first part, that last part makes it all worth it.

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"The problem with the oil change analogy is that mechanics don't siphon off a bit to pay themselves."

They do. They don't work for free. But they don't go directly into the investment account, month after month, year after year, siphoning off money that will now never be compounding. They don't charge an ongoing percent of the value of your car no matter if you need an oil change or not.

The way to fix this scam is simple. No more pulling fees out of the investment accounts. Have the clients write a check every month for ALL fees and commissions. Just like they do for everything else. No other business takes money out of retirement accounts with no full accounting.

I have no idea what you were trying to say in the rest of your post. Sorry.

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My ~0.23% expense ratio index funds over at Vanguard are relying on all of these people to keep trading, so I hope these people paying outrageous fees for managed accounts don't get too smart.

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