Fake Financial PlannersThere are two types of
financial planners. There are legitimate financial planners who have knowledge
and services that will help you develop a sophisticated plan that has a high
probability of occurring. Then there is the other type, sales representatives
who call themselves financial planners because it helps them sell investment
and insurance products. They dont have specialized planning knowledge and
their services have one purpose sell you the products that make them the
most money.
Fake financial planners are very dangerous. What if you
bought a plan from one of them and based your financial decisions on their plan
recommendations. For example, the plan tells you how much to save, how much you
can afford to spend, and how to protect yourself from the risks of outliving
your assets. Plus, several of their plan assumptions impact when you retire,
your standard of living during retirement, and your financial security late in
life when you need it the most.
These plans are very long-term because
you may have several working years left before you retire. Then your assets
have to produce increasing income for 20 to 30 years during your retirement.
Unfortunately, you dont find out you have a defective plan until years
into the future when you cant retire when you want to and live the way
you want to. This realization is devastating because its too late and
your only choices are to defer retirement or work part-time.
You might
be asking yourself, Arent there regulations that prevent sales reps
from calling themselves financial planners when they dont have financial
planning knowledge? There are two answers you should be aware of. First,
there are no regulations. Reps can use any title they want to. Second,
unscrupulous reps use verbal sales pitches so there is no written record of
what they said to you. Verbal information is very easy to deny later when
its your word against the reps word.
So how do you tell the
real financial planners from the fake financial planners? Here are seven rules
you should follow that will help you protect your financial future from
predatory sales reps who masquerade as financial planners to maximize their
product sales.
- All of the information that impacts your selection
decision must be in writing.
- Only select a financial planner who provides
documentation that he or she is a CFP® (Certified Financial Planner) or
CPA/PFS (Personal Financial Specialist).
- The professional must have at least five years of
planning experience.
- The financial planner must be an RIA (Registered
Investment Advisor) or Investment Advisor Representative (IAR). RIAs and IARs
are held to higher ethical standards.
- The financial planner must be an acknowledged
fiduciary. Fiduciaries are required to put your financial interests ahead of
their own.
- The professional must provide planning services for
fees and not commissions.
- Dont select financial planners based on what
they say. Require them to prove what they are saying is true. When you allow
them to say whatever they want, they control the information that you use to
select the right financial planner for you.
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