How Do I Find a Financial Advisor?

Hi Scott,

I have read lots of advice about avoiding excessive fees charged by financial planners. Problem is that we still need one! My wife and I now have over $1 million in super — $400,000 in Australian Super and the rest with a non-bank retail manager (it’s an Asgard account with three managed funds). This is all great, but we’re in our early 50s and need some professional help to manage it. Any ideas?

Will

Hi Will, You’ve done well!

Let me be clear about this, the biggest cost you’ll face in dealing with an advisor is ‘compounding fees’.

I’ll give you a really simple example:

Let’s go to ASIC MoneySmart’s super calculator (moneysmart.gov.au), and punch in some numbers. I’ll assume you want to retire when you’re 67 and you currently earn the average wage.

You have a choice between two funds: what the calculator calls a ‘medium high’ share fund that charges 1.3% in fees, and another fund called ‘medium low’ that charges 0.3% in fees.

Let’s assume they both earn historical rates of return on shares on your $1 million fund.

If you choose the lower fee fund, you’ll have $270,000 more in your account after 15 years when you retire.

That’s why when it comes to choosing your advisor it’s incredibly important that you pay a true professional a reassuringly expensive one-off fee for independent advice (it could be upwards of $5000). However, make it a non-negotiable that you are invested in an ultra-low-cost portfolio that compounds without any tacked-on costs.So, how do you find such an advisor?

Well, just like any relationship, the first time is free — and then you start paying. So I’d suggest you go on dates with at least three financial planners before you commit.

Scott

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