| Ofcourse not. The fee is enough money to be turned into few million again over time. |
PP. My point wasn't to use an adviser to pick investments. There is not a human being on the planet who can do that in a cost-effective manner. My point was that for those with substantial wealth, or anyone who doesn't receive a W-2, an advisor can be helpful. |
| It absolutely makes sense for us. Several benefits, including estate planning. |
How much are you paying per year? Estate planning will likely cost 5k, NO MAS! |
Okay we’ll just use LegalZoom and you’re fine. You don’t have to use an advisor just because someone else finds it useful. |
Yeah, a fee based advisor. We don’t have a W-2 and our accountant is fine. You should never pay 1% for financial advice unless you’re into losing $$$. |
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If the advisor was so smart they wouldn't give away their financial secrets.
Either sit in the general unmanaged mutual fund market, or become a real working capitalist and search where to spend your money to create value (start a business, fund a founder, buy real estates, etc). |
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I don’t use one. It’s good for people who are too intimidated or just don’t want to deal with financial management.
No shame in using one if you feel more comfortable. That being said, I always think of it this way. If a market return is 8%, the portfolio advisor just needs you and seven others to make as much off your money and the seven others as you do. That math always bothered me. |
| Have them manage $500k and just copy every move they make with the rest of you monkey on your own… |
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I use one, he’s a college friend. I’m probably paying him too much. Mostly invested in a cocktail of index funds. It does make sense to have a strategic mix of index funds, not just pour everything into a sp500 index.
For me, I just do it so I don’t have to worry about it. He’ll be a bit more aggressive than I would be and will also make moves to harvest losses, when appropriate, that will offset cap gains on my company stock awards. His fee is around 0.9-1% which admittedly is the cost of a part time employee. I may part ways with him - but it was necessary for me to get some space from my portfolio and not think about it. |
| If I had 15m I would still have what v I have now whi h is a portfolio of four low cost index funds. |
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Honestly back in the day there were better people in the business who had a passion for investing and finance. Now they are under so much pressure to gain more and more clients it's become a straight sales job. |
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We have one. I have an MBA and could do a lot of this, but I don't have time. I also don't mow our lawn, wash our car, or pull weeds. I know how to do all those tasks also.
If you're in it just for returns, you can do it on your own. Just figure out your risk profile. If you want financial planning advice, that is when it gets helpful. We have a lot going on -- estate planning, planning for college, private school, trusts, and some complicated tax stuff. That's worth it to us. Yes, I could have hired a CPA and lawyer for each task, and spent a few hours every month rebalancing our portfolio, doing tax loss harveting, and doing the paperwork for donation of appreciated stock to charities we give to. But if that fell on me, it would never get done and I know it. |
| They probably won't out perform the indexes, but they might be able to lower you risk with the right mix of funds. |
They are not worth it if you stay on top of everything. $15 million is a lot. Not your 200k - 400k index fund portfolio. But if you stay on top --- great. 99.9% of people will not stay on top of anything -- ever. Most people who say they would -- do not. Why? Forget, not interested, lazy, work like 80 hrs a week (looking at you biglaw). In those cases it is mandatory. You know you. If you have 15 million ---- is it tax efficient? Is it really diverse? Do you take you required inherited IRA distributions when you are supposed to. Are you saving enough? What about college? Can you do all this -- yes. Will you? |