Rate Alert! Rate Alerts Glossary Glossary Help Help
 
  Bankate.com
 
News and Advice Compare Rates Calculators
 
 
- advertisement -
 
 

10 ways to rate your financial adviser

Earlier this year, the stock market fell to a 12-year low, losing 54 percent of its peak value and taking a vast chunk of ordinary Americans' wealth with it.

- advertisement -

In the wake of such big losses, many investors are looking for someone to hold accountable. That has placed financial advisers under the microscope.

"From what I've seen from industry surveys and things like that, a very high percentage of people are re-evaluating their adviser," says David Loeper, chairman and CEO of Wealthcare Capital Management in Richmond, Va., and author of "Stop the Investing Rip-Off."

How do you determine whether your adviser has your best interests at heart? By asking questions and doing your homework, says Kristin Kaepplein, director of the Office of Investor Education and Advocacy at the Securities and Exchange Commission.

"Even when you are delegating management of your assets, that doesn't mean you don't have to do your due diligence, especially on an ongoing basis," Kaepplein says.

The following are five signs your adviser may be a dud -- and, by contrast, five qualities the best financial advisers share.

Qualities of bad advisers
  1. Losses that exceed standard benchmarks.
  2. Selling products instead of sound advice.
  3. Maximizing risk regardless of goals.
  4. Linking past performance to future results.
  5. Failure to maintain basic investment safety standards.

1. Losses that exceed standard benchmarks
One way to identify mismanagement is to compare your losses with those experienced by others with similar goals and time horizons, Loeper says.

For example, Loeper recommends that workers planning to retire within the next eight years keep a mix of 45 percent stocks and 55 percent bonds. Such a portfolio would have resulted in a mere 12 percent loss last year, he says.

"If you're within 10 years of retirement and you lost more than 12 percent, somebody was making needless gambles with your money, and that's a warning sign I would look for," he says.

2. Selling products instead of sound advice
A lot of advisers are just glorified salesmen paid by commissions based on the type of investments they sell, says Certified Financial Planner Steve Pomeranz, who also hosts the radio show "On the Money" on National Public Radio affiliate WXEL-FM in West Palm Beach, Fla.

If an adviser begins a conversation with a sales pitch for a specific product, it's time to look for somebody new.

"It's like you go and see your doctor, and he says, 'I think you're going to be good for chemo,'" Pomeranz says. "Well, wait a minute, doctor, you haven't even talked to me yet. You haven't done any tests. How do you know?"

Loeper agrees that many advisers who are paid on commission have a financial incentive to steer clients into inappropriate investments. Fortunately, the financial crisis has given people a "dose of reality" about how much they should trust advisers, he says.

 
 
Next: "If (past performance) is not indicative, then why would I look at it?"
Page | 1 | 2 | 3 |
 
 RESOURCES
Financial planners: Not just for millionaires
What's your risk tolerance?
Retirement Basics
 TOP PERSONAL FINANCE STORIES
9 cash-saving strategies that pay big bucks
5 low-tech ways to manage cash
8 ways to find and keep a temporary job
 

Compare Rates
NATIONAL OVERNIGHT AVERAGES
30 yr fixed mtg 4.97%
48 month new car loan 6.79%
1 yr CD 1.58%
Rates may include points
ADVERTISING PARTNERS
RELATED CALCULATORS
  How much life insurance do I need?  
  Calculate your payment on any loan  
  What will it take to save for a goal?  
VIEW ALL  
BASICS SERIES
Begin with personal finance fundamentals:
Auto Loans
Checking
Credit Cards
Debt Consolidation
Insurance
Investing
Home Equity
Mortgages
Student Loans
Taxes
Retirement
FINANCIAL LITERACY
Rev up your portfolio
with these tips and tricks.
- advertisement -
 
- advertisement -




News & Advice | Compare Rates | Calculators
Mortgage | Home Equity | Auto | Investing | Checking & Savings | Credit Cards | Debt Management | College Finance | Taxes | Personal Finance
About Bankrate | Privacy | Online Media Kit | Partnerships | Investor Relations | Press/Broadcast | Contact Us | Sitemap
NASDAQ: RATE | RSS Feeds | Order Rate Data | Bankrate Canada | Bankrate China

* Mortgage rate may include points. See rate tables for details. Click here.
* To see the definition of overnight averages click here.

Bankrate.com ®, Copyright © 2009 Bankrate, Inc., All Rights Reserved, Terms of Use.