Anonymous wrote:Does it make financial sense? Of course not. But people spend money on this for the same set of reasons people spend money on anything:
a) ignorance. They don’t know any better
b) self-importance/vanity. They think it makes them special.
C) laziness. They genuinely can’t be bothered with this crap, and can afford not to have to worry about it.
People spend money on worse things…
Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am just trying to see what we are missing. We are in our mid 50s and have a net worth of about $5 million. We have 401k’s, Roth IRAs, allocated generally on the three fund approach from Boglehead. In taxable account, we have VTI and T-Bills. We also have some I-bonds and savings in HYSA. College for kids covered by 529s and a little cash flow.
What are we missing by not having an advisor?
Missed opportunities. you really need about 10 million in investable assets to get the alternative asset allocation opportunities.
And have someone doing great diligence on all of it.
Which alternative assets do advisors have access to that DIY investors don't?
Private equity funds to name one
Anonymous wrote:Even in good marriages, a third party (financial advisor) being involved can be a very good idea.
Anonymous wrote:my advisor saved my ass and that of several people i know specifically around the tax implications of startups, ISOs, AMT, etc. He convinced my CFO and founders to allow 83b elections which saved me millions in taxes.
He's referred me to excellent tax accountants and estate planners.
He keeps an eye on my accounts, talks me out of stupid stock decisions, makes sure my cash flow is sufficient. Could I do all of that myself? sure. might i get distracted and screw it up at some point? very likely. Just like I *can* do all my own cleaning and laundry and cooking and brake jobs... I usually pay someone else to do it.
No one is holding a gun to your head and forcing you to use a financial advisor, or to order take-out. My arrangement works for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am just trying to see what we are missing. We are in our mid 50s and have a net worth of about $5 million. We have 401k’s, Roth IRAs, allocated generally on the three fund approach from Boglehead. In taxable account, we have VTI and T-Bills. We also have some I-bonds and savings in HYSA. College for kids covered by 529s and a little cash flow.
What are we missing by not having an advisor?
Missed opportunities. you really need about 10 million in investable assets to get the alternative asset allocation opportunities.
And have someone doing great diligence on all of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The more money you have, the smaller percentage you have to pay or you can negotiate to do so. All of you should not be paying 1 percent if you have anything worth being managed. That is an old way of thinking in investment services. We use an investment firm and our money along with extended families money all is considered under the same umbrella. So we get investment services for far less than 1% because of the large amount total but our personal direct money is just a percentage of the larger pot. We still get the same services. It is very much worth it to us. Speak to investment firms and see what they can do for you. Or pool with extended family members like we did. They want your business but you have to make it worth it to them.
+1
By the time we were at a million, we were paying less than 0.5%. A good financial advisor is worth it. We do get better returns than the index market funds, have more diversity, and ours manages most financial issues for us. so they play the game of keeping our "cash" in CD/MM so we have FDIC insurance for all of it (there is a lot of it)---I don't have the time to be opening 20+ bank accounts and managing the 3-6 month CDs that come due (that has been the best returns in last year). My FA also gets access to CDs that are at higher rates than even I can get at most good online banks.
How much are you keeping in CD/MM an why? $500K for you and spouse is (1) far too much anyway beyond a short term need like real estate sale, and (2) already half of that "million".
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am just trying to see what we are missing. We are in our mid 50s and have a net worth of about $5 million. We have 401k’s, Roth IRAs, allocated generally on the three fund approach from Boglehead. In taxable account, we have VTI and T-Bills. We also have some I-bonds and savings in HYSA. College for kids covered by 529s and a little cash flow.
What are we missing by not having an advisor?
Missed opportunities. you really need about 10 million in investable assets to get the alternative asset allocation opportunities.
And have someone doing great diligence on all of it.
Which alternative assets do advisors have access to that DIY investors don't?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The more money you have, the smaller percentage you have to pay or you can negotiate to do so. All of you should not be paying 1 percent if you have anything worth being managed. That is an old way of thinking in investment services. We use an investment firm and our money along with extended families money all is considered under the same umbrella. So we get investment services for far less than 1% because of the large amount total but our personal direct money is just a percentage of the larger pot. We still get the same services. It is very much worth it to us. Speak to investment firms and see what they can do for you. Or pool with extended family members like we did. They want your business but you have to make it worth it to them.
+1
By the time we were at a million, we were paying less than 0.5%. A good financial advisor is worth it. We do get better returns than the index market funds, have more diversity, and ours manages most financial issues for us. so they play the game of keeping our "cash" in CD/MM so we have FDIC insurance for all of it (there is a lot of it)---I don't have the time to be opening 20+ bank accounts and managing the 3-6 month CDs that come due (that has been the best returns in last year). My FA also gets access to CDs that are at higher rates than even I can get at most good online banks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am just trying to see what we are missing. We are in our mid 50s and have a net worth of about $5 million. We have 401k’s, Roth IRAs, allocated generally on the three fund approach from Boglehead. In taxable account, we have VTI and T-Bills. We also have some I-bonds and savings in HYSA. College for kids covered by 529s and a little cash flow.
What are we missing by not having an advisor?
Missed opportunities. you really need about 10 million in investable assets to get the alternative asset allocation opportunities.
And have someone doing great diligence on all of it.