Should You Fire Your Financial Advisor?

Your decision should be based on objective timely data that helps you make the right decision. There is a good chance the information comes from your advisor who is monitoring himself. For example, a performance report tells you the advisor results. Additional analysis may show your risk or expenses are too high. It pays to remember advisors do not like to provide information that will get them fired.

Investors have a number of reasons for firing current advisors. The top five are: Continue reading

Should Financial Advisors Monitor Themselves?

Let’s say you raised chickens for a living. Would you hire a fox to guard your chickens?

Financial advisors have conflicts of interest just like the fox. You may have a big problem when you hire an advisor to produce performance and the advisor produces performance reports, and the advisor explains the performance reports to you.

Advisors have two primary motives. First, they want to sell you investment products and services. Second, if they are compensated with fees, they want to retain you as a client for as long as possible to keep the fees flowing.

Consequently, advisors have a major conflict of interest.

Prudent investors use the services of independent third parties to monitor their advisors performance, expense, compliance record, and other important information.

Investor Watchdog is launching an advisor monitoring service in February 2012.