Contents Title Page Contents Copyright Dedication Author’s Note Introduction Keep Your Money Where You Make Your Money Paying Off Debt: Your Best Investment Beware of Bogus Advisors Avoiding the Worst Investments: The Best-Performing Mutual Funds Taxes: Why Your Investment Statement Is Not Entirely Accurate Your Life Partner May Be Your Worst Financial Enemy Become an Automatic Millionaire Without an Advisor’s Help How to Find the Right Advisor for You Holistic Wealth: The Path to Financial (and Physical) Health Follow the Money Trail to a Better Financial Future Appendix: Financial Independence Day Checklist Acknowledgments Index About the Author Footnotes Copyright © 2016 by Liz Davidson All rights reserved This book presents the ideas of its author. It is not intended to be a substitute for consultation with a financial professional. The publisher and the author disclaim liability for any adverse effects resulting directly or indirectly from information contained in this book. Please note that several of the names and personal details in the book have been changed in order to protect people’s identities. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to [email protected] or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016. www.hmhco.com The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows: Davidson, Liz What your financial advisor isn’t telling you: the 10 essential truths you need to know about your money / Liz Davidson. pages cm ISBN 978-0-544-60230-4 (hardback) ISBN 978-0-544-63334-6 (ebook) 1. Finance, Personal. I. Title. HG173. D335 2016 332.024—dc23 2015015902 Cover design by Brian Moore v1.0116 The chart on page 63 is courtesy of the Investment Company Institute. 2015. 2015 Investment Company Fact Book: A Review of Trends and Activity in the Investment Company Industry. Washington, DC: Investment Company Institute. Available at www.icifactbook.org. All other graphs and diagrams throughout the book are courtesy of the author, including the DebtBlaster chart, which was developed using software licensed from Highsoft AS, Norway. For mom. Your courage has been the greatest lesson of my life. Author’s Note Before you read any further, please know this: I am not a financial advisor. I have zero investments, insurance, or mutual funds to sell you. I couldn’t legally sell them to you even if you asked, because I’m not licensed to sell securities. I don’t have a pitch, an ulterior motive, or a quota to reach. And that’s precisely why I am the author of this book. As the founder and CEO of Financial Finesse, I run a company that provides people with entirely unbiased financial guidance, no strings attached, and this book is an extension of that practice. While the mission of this book is to shed light on the limitations of the financial advisor industry and to offer education, support, and insider knowledge that you are unlikely to receive in a typical advisor-client relationship, What Your Financial Advisor Isn’t Telling You is not intended—in tone or in content—to be an exposé of financial planners or the financial services industry as a whole. Rather, the purpose of this book is to educate you about the vitally important questions you need to ask about your long-range financial future, whether or not you choose to have a financial advisor. Many millions of Americans put their faith and trust in their advisors, and that’s fine. But you really owe it to yourself to know the right questions to ask your advisor. After all, if you can’t have a truly open dialogue with your advisor about your money, you may never get on the same page. Furthermore, it is important to bear in mind that if you don’t ask, your advisor is not always going to volunteer certain information. As the employer of a team of elite CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professionals who work exclusively as full-time financial educators, I know what a unique and valuable opportunity it is to work with exceptional financial planners. These professionals have the extensive training and experience to help people in all areas of their financial lives and a deep commitment to helping others become more financially secure. The problem with financial advisors does not lie with them as people; the problem is that they work in an industry that is typically not incentivized to operate in the consumer’s best interest. Back when the CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professionals at Financial Finesse were employed at large financial institutions, making a living by selling financial products and services, they were generally limited to working with people who could afford to purchase high- priced financial products and services. They entered the profession to help all people, but the current system didn’t always make that financially feasible. In today’s financial services industry, those who most need serious financial help are the least likely to get it, and those who can afford it too often receive sales pitches rather than the unbiased guidance they’re looking for. As you will learn in the introduction to this book, this is what inspired me to open the doors of Financial Finesse in the first place—the strong belief and personal conviction that everyone is entitled to the benefits of unbiased financial education. By writing this book, my staff and I now have the opportunity on a broader scale to share financial knowledge that will better equip you to be in control of your money. This book is being released at a time when the financial industry is moving toward more transparency, which is good news. The even better news is that this book is the tool that will help you capitalize on this new transparency. Introduction DAN AND MARGIE’S STORY After Dan and Margie sold their mortgage-free home and moved to Florida, they were $500,000 richer in cash. While transferring their account from their branch in New York, the Florida-based bank teller suggested that they meet with the bank’s investment brokers, so they did. After discussions and an evaluation, the broker sold them a variable annuity, in which they invested about $350,000. The plan was for the annuity to generate lifetime income payments to pay for their regular monthly expenses in retirement. What Dan and Margie didn’t realize was that the variable annuity was invested primarily in stocks. When the market took a downturn, their annuity income did too. This meant that Dan and Margie would eventually have to start drawing down their retirement nest egg to supplement the dwindled annuity income in order to cover their regular monthly expenses. In an effort to protect their retirement income, they unintentionally put themselves at risk of running out of money with a product that was too aggressive for their needs. REGINA AND MARC’S STORY Regina and Marc waited a long time to have a baby, and when they did they made three important phone calls: the first two went to their respective parents, and the third went to a financial advisor who had advertised on one of Regina’s favorite baby websites. They didn’t want to waste any time before setting up a college fund for their new bundle of joy. Marc, a high school teacher at the most respected private school in the community, knew all too well the financial trouble that many families found themselves in when it was time to apply to college. As a teacher, Marc was passionate about the value of education and adamant that his son would not have to make compromises when it came to going to the college or university of his choice. He was determined to do whatever it took to make sure he and his wife saved enough to fully pay for his son’s education. Marc and Regina’s financial advisor explained to them the benefits of a 529 plan: the tax savings, the prepaid option offered by some states, and the comfort of knowing that, when the time came, their son would be able to attend college of knowing that, when the time came, their son would be able to attend college without taking out student loans. The planner estimated that with a 7 percent increase in college costs per year, they would need to save about $240,000 by the time their son was 18 and going off to school. To reach that goal, the advisor recommended that Regina and Marc sock away close to $550 a month. The problem was that the advisor was only planning for what they specifically asked him—how to save for college—and had asked no other questions. The next month, when Regina went to pay her credit card bill online, she remembered that she had been planning to use that $550 a month to pay down her hefty $10,000 balance, which she had accrued before she met Marc; she had used her credit card to sustain herself when she was unexpectedly laid off from her job. Since that amount was now being allocated to the baby’s future, she clicked to pay the minimum monthly payment and her payment was satisfied for the billing cycle. When Regina and Marc called our financial helpline in 2009, they had nearly $30,000 of credit card debt. Even worse, after a significant loss due to the stock market downturn, they had only a little more than $20,000 in a 529 plan for college. At the same time, Marc was worried about his own job security in the face of the recession. We worked with Regina and Marc to find a practical solution to pay off their debt and preserve their college savings, but in the process their lives were turned upside down. They had to temporarily stop saving for college in order to free up funds to pay off their credit card debt, which broke their hearts, especially as they watched the stock market rebound. Marc had to pick up extra duties at his school to generate more income, and he also took odd jobs during the summer. Regina, who had wanted to dedicate her time to staying home and raising her son, was forced to ask her mom to care for him while she accepted a job outside her chosen field. Ultimately, Regina and Marc were both able to develop a strong financial foundation and return to their normal lives, but for several years life was much tougher than they ever expected—all because they didn’t pay off their debt when they had the chance. TAMARA’S STORY In her early forties, stay-at-home mom Tamara hadn’t contributed to a 401(k) or any retirement plan since she left her last job a decade earlier. In fact, she had been meaning to roll over her savings from her old company’s plan into some sort of other account, but she really had no idea what.
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