Sorry to use SEC’s name for this article. I had to. It is too much based on a new questionnaire that they have put up on their site. However it is only a decent reproduction of the same, because a lot of my comments are inter woven into it.

Well for starters, I have to give you a caveat – regulators remain the same all over the world. The more powerful they are, the worse it is for the investor. Now read on:

Finding the right financial planner can be a confusing process. (ha they recognise that it is a process, a nice beginning).

“Just like a grocery store offers more products than a convenience store, some financial professionals offer a wide range of products or services, while others offer a more limited selection,” the bulletin says, after urging consumers to read all documents provided by a prospective planner before hiring him or her.

I seriously think this is a poor example. In a grocery store normally toxic products and food products are not kept together. Also medicines are sold by qualified people, liquor is sold only to people who have a permit, and tobacco is sold only to people over the age of 18. Not true in a FP’s office. All products are kept in one place, and the customer is not capable of knowing what is a generic product priced like a formulation. Or a toxic product not marked as such.

The SEC’s tips for investors include the following:

Do your homework and ask questions. (will somebody tell me what this means please?)
Find out whether the products and services available are right for you.(hey jerk if I had known this, I would have bought it online dude)
Understand how you’ll pay for services and products, and how your financial professional gets paid as well. (Sure!)
Ask about the financial professional’s experience and credentials.(In this alphabet soup of qualifications, how will I know the difference between CA, CFA, CPA, CFP, ICWA, MA, MBA, BCOM, BE, DR. ….). Thank you SEC.
Ask the financial professional if he or she has had a disciplinary history with a government regulator or had customer complaints. (and expect him to say the truth, thank you Sir)
The commission’s checklist of questions for investors covers three areas:

expectations from the relationships;

the planner’s experience and background;

and products.

The questions are as follows:

Expectations of the Relationship

How often should I expect to hear from you? And pray, why?
How often will you review my account or make recommendations to me? Will you do things because it benefits me, or because it benefits you and the principals whom you represent?
If my investments aren’t doing well, will you call me and recommend something else? And pray how will I know why you are doing this?
If I invest with you, how can I keep track of how well my investments are doing? Do you design/sell some software that will do this- and how much does it cost please?
Experience and Background

What experience do you have, especially with people like me?

What percentage of your time would you estimate that you spend on people with situations and goals that are similar to mine?
What education have you had that relates to your work?
What professional licenses do you hold?
Are you registered with the SEC, a state securities regulator, or FINRA?
How long have you done this type of work?
Have you ever been disciplined by a regulator? If yes, what was the problem and how was it resolved?
Have you had customer complaints? If yes, how many, what were they about, and how were they resolved? ?

Products

What type of products do you offer?
How many different products do you offer?
Do you offer “house” products? If so, what types of products are they, and do you receive any incentives for selling these products, or for maintaining them in a customer’s account? What kind of incentives are they?

Do you sell Loan products too?

Payments and Fees

Given my situation and what I’m looking for, what is the [best / most cost effective] way for me to pay for financial services? Why?
What are the fees that I will pay for products and services?
How and when will I see the fees I pay?
Which of those fees will I pay directly (such as a commission on a stock trade) and which are taken directly from the products I own (such as some mutual fund expenses)

How do you get paid?
If I invested $1,000 with you today, approximately how much would you get paid during the following year, based on my investment?
Does someone else (such as a fund company or an insurance company) pay you for offering or selling these products or services?

 

  1. I would find it easy to get details and analyze details of financial products in comparison to getting details and analyzing details of financial professional.
    Such financial matters need integrity. It is always difficult to check integrity of a person. Better to understand a financial product than a financial professional.

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