Anonymous wrote:We have one though whether we should keep one is debateable. However, one thing to note is that the use of this advisor allows us to buy funds with institutional shares that have much lower fees. So say 0.05% instead of 0.30% or something like that. So the 1% we're paying may be more like 0.8%. Area there other ways to get into those type of shares without advisor (or having multi-million to hit those fund limits to get institutional shares)? It doesn't net a positive return but it does make the "fee" smaller in reality for analysis purposes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you mean your current advisor is charging a % of managed assets? What is your %?
yes, he's charging a quarterly fee based on the value of our total investments. we're at 1.25%. we end up paying a few thousand a year, if i were to add up all the quarterlies. over 15 years, that is a big pill to swallow.
We use an adviser also, and we're at 0.75 or 0.8% -- 1.25% is high. Is he independent (like not at a company that also sells their own funds)?
You can always meet with him to ask him to justify his fees. To us, the fees are made up just by them doing tax loss harvesting and portfolio rebalancing, both of which I could do, but would honestly never get done if it was on my list.
Then the added value is on the advisory side. We meet with our advisers once a quarter, and use them for advice on tax minimization, college planning, retirement, plannning, estate planning, and trust planning. If you're not using them for this (all of this is included in the existing fees), then you're not getting the value you could from your adviser.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you mean your current advisor is charging a % of managed assets? What is your %?
yes, he's charging a quarterly fee based on the value of our total investments. we're at 1.25%. we end up paying a few thousand a year, if i were to add up all the quarterlies. over 15 years, that is a big pill to swallow.
Anonymous wrote:Do you mean your current advisor is charging a % of managed assets? What is your %?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No insight to offer but we are considering the same thing. And we can't say our portfolio has done particularly well - the performance seems roughly the same as an index fund. Hate seeing the fees we're paying. Have been researching using personalcapital.com and considering self-management.
OP here - I'm assuming there's some kind of fee structure with using the Personal Capital software? Or do you pay a one-time fee to purchase the software?
I made the mistake of enlightening myself on exactly how much we've paid in total fees over the past 15 years with our same advisor, and how much more we would have in our portfolio had we not paid those fees![]()
Anonymous wrote:No insight to offer but we are considering the same thing. And we can't say our portfolio has done particularly well - the performance seems roughly the same as an index fund. Hate seeing the fees we're paying. Have been researching using personalcapital.com and considering self-management.