Anonymous wrote:1% seems high for just managing your money. We pay 0.6% on first 2M and after that it drops 0.1% with each 2M. Bottoming out at0.3%. Money in "cash/cd/bonds/treasuries" is not included in that, just a simple fee for purchasing them, which is way less than even 0.3%.
Anonymous wrote:My guy didn't beat the market, year after year. but we our investments certainly grew year after relatively close to the pace of the market. We accepted that because we are in our 50s and wanted a conservative portfolio. (We lived through 2000 and 2008,)
The real value, it turned out, is that our investments did not fall as far as the market has in the last six months. Yes, we are down, but not nearly as much as some of our peers who were overweighted on tech.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My financial advisor offers estate planning services (wills and trusts) included in their fees. They advise on tax implications of various scenarios and make suggestions on any financial scenario I throw at them.
Ours as well plus insurance planning, education planning, beneficiary designations, charitable donation/foundation planning, and retirement planning year-by-year scenarios including major purchases, life events, home planning (sales, second homes, down-sizing, etc), and multi-generational wealth transfers. We also meet with reams of spreadsheets annually to go over all of the above in detail. And no, we don't have tens of millions to get this level of service. FYI, we also pay on a sliding scale, 1% is only for the first million and scales slides toward zero for successive amounts they manage. Big firms need/want to generate lots of revenue. Look for smaller more focused fee-for-service financial planning firms. Our estates attorney gave us some names and then we interviewed several before choosing one with a planner I clicked with. Been with them for over 10 years.
Wow! That's a lot for 1%. Mind sharing how much you have with them? We had one where we also paid 1% but we only got wealth management from them. Tax planning and other services were extra. We fired them after a few years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My financial advisor offers estate planning services (wills and trusts) included in their fees. They advise on tax implications of various scenarios and make suggestions on any financial scenario I throw at them.
Ours as well plus insurance planning, education planning, beneficiary designations, charitable donation/foundation planning, and retirement planning year-by-year scenarios including major purchases, life events, home planning (sales, second homes, down-sizing, etc), and multi-generational wealth transfers. We also meet with reams of spreadsheets annually to go over all of the above in detail. And no, we don't have tens of millions to get this level of service. FYI, we also pay on a sliding scale, 1% is only for the first million and scales slides toward zero for successive amounts they manage. Big firms need/want to generate lots of revenue. Look for smaller more focused fee-for-service financial planning firms. Our estates attorney gave us some names and then we interviewed several before choosing one with a planner I clicked with. Been with them for over 10 years.
Anonymous wrote:He can take 1% of your assets every year plus whatever transaction fees and commissions he gets churning your account. That's pretty much about it.
Anonymous wrote:My financial advisor offers estate planning services (wills and trusts) included in their fees. They advise on tax implications of various scenarios and make suggestions on any financial scenario I throw at them.