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advisers_err [2024/06/11 18:45] tom |
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Advisor Errors | Advisor Errors | ||
- | Every weekend there is a new financial plan in the press. The planning portion is usually fine; the investing part is maladroit. The so-called experts are infected by modern portfolio theory. Here are some examples. | + | Every weekend there is a new financial plan/financial facelift |
* “As they move into retirement”, | * “As they move into retirement”, | ||
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* 0.39% is the income provided by the mutual fund she (now age 68) was sold (not even 1%). Funds are NOT noted for the income they produce. She will have to eat into capital to survive retirement. The planner she has now suggested a more income oriented portfolio. This example gets at the fatal flaw of asset management by professionals. There are really only two options offered by the industry: growth or income. The income portfolio offered, however, does not eliminate her problem. Typically, it contains preferreds and bonds. You want growing income. Growing dividends drives capital growth. You must get both. RoB, Oct29’22 “Can Luna, 68, retire next year and keep her home . . . “ | * 0.39% is the income provided by the mutual fund she (now age 68) was sold (not even 1%). Funds are NOT noted for the income they produce. She will have to eat into capital to survive retirement. The planner she has now suggested a more income oriented portfolio. This example gets at the fatal flaw of asset management by professionals. There are really only two options offered by the industry: growth or income. The income portfolio offered, however, does not eliminate her problem. Typically, it contains preferreds and bonds. You want growing income. Growing dividends drives capital growth. You must get both. RoB, Oct29’22 “Can Luna, 68, retire next year and keep her home . . . “ | ||
- | June 8 2024 - Here’s another example of the most common mistake advisors make: they fail to realize, that with dividend growth, yields grow. Before the advisor pounced, the couple had an excellent portfolio with 17 individual stocks and 25% of their investments in money market funds. Their return, the advisor said, was 5% over the last five years. Dear advisor: but their yield, being stocks, would have grown over those years. The advisor stupidly recommended selling the stocks, losing the enhanced income stream and for more [unneeded] diversification (17 fine companies is plenty) be sold and replaced by ETFs. Dear advisor funds are run by professionals and do not beat the market. | + | June 8 2024 - Here’s another example of the most common mistake advisors make: they fail to realize, that with dividend growth, |
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