Make centurylink.net Your Homepage!Get the CenturyLink Toolbar
  • New: Location-Based Advertising

    Location-Based Advertising

    CenturyLink is launching location-based advertising to improve your Internet experience. Click here to learn more.

  • Log In
  • centurylink.com
    • Residential
    • Small Business
    • Large Business
    • Wholesale
Cloudy
5-day forecast
59 °F | °C

Ashburn, VA

Edit
Cancel

Centurylink

  • Web
  • eBay
  • Amazon
Top searches: Powerball Preakness Odds Ken Venturi Tom Hanks NBA Playoffs
  • News
  • Watch TV
  • Games
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Local
  • More
    • Autos
    • Business
    • Careers
    • Family
    • Finance
    • Music
    • PC Safety & Security
    • Phone Book
    • Premiums
    • Shopping
    • Toolbar
    • Travel
    • Weather
    • In Theaters
  •  
    My Account
    • My CenturyLink Bill
    • View / Pay Bill Online
    • Add / Remove Services
    •  
    • Billing Help
    • Special Offers
    • Settings
    • Create Account
    • Username Management
    • Access Management
    • Email Settings
    • Online Transactions
    • Add / Delete Mailbox
    • Parental Controls
    • About Our Ads
    • Forgot Password
    • Change Email Secret Question & Answer
    • Customize My Homepage
  •  
    Help
    • Support
    • Internet Support
    • Email & Homepage Support
    • Prism Customer Support
    • Chat Now
    • Email us
    • Call 800.366.8201
    • Tours
    • Site Tour
    • Email Tour
    • Send Feedback
  •  
    Email

Basics of Money

Kiplinger

When to Replace Your Financial Adviser

Kiplinger.com

OUR READER:
Who: Donna Shaw, 65
Where: East Hartford, Conn.
Question: Should I dump my financial adviser to save on fees?

Something is nibbling away at Donna’s nest egg—devouring it, actually. A stiff $100,000, representing a sizable chunk of her total retirement savings, has gone to advisory and fund fees since she opened a brokerage account 11 years ago. Over that period, Donna’s investments have returned a modest 4.2% annualized, net of expenses. That’s in line with Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index, but it’s less than she expected. With just a tiny pension and a Social Security benefit from her former husband (now deceased), Donna is concerned about the high fees because she could be drawing on her investments for 20 years or more. So she’s considering writing a “Dear John” note and switching to an adviser who will charge her much less and do at least as well, maybe better. “I am a very frugal person,” Donna says. “I don’t question what my financial adviser does, but how much it’s costing me.”

SEE ALSO: Special Report on Choosing a Financial Planner

Donna, who retired in 2002, is hesitant to manage her own money. She is considering investing in index or target-date funds through a discount broker or low-cost fund manager. But poor choices or missed opportunities could leave her starved for income.

“Most people need professional investing help,” says Mike Piershale, of Piershale Financial Group, in Crystal Lake, Ill. But he suggests that with a better adviser who charges about 1%—Donna’s charges closer to 2%—and a diversified portfolio, she could have secured an annualized return at least 1.5 percentage points better over the 11 years. If so, Donna’s portfolio would be more than $100,000 larger, he estimates.

Piershale also takes issue with the makeup of Donna’s accounts. She has a Roth IRA, a regular IRA and a taxable account. Surprisingly, each holds nearly the same 15 mutual funds—and in the same weightings, to boot. “Those identical accounts are a red flag,” he says. It should be elementary for any adviser, especially a highly paid one, to arrange the funds so Donna gets the most tax-efficient returns. For example, investments that throw off capital gains are better held in a taxable account, where they enjoy a preferential tax rate, than in a tax-deferred IRA.

Switching horses. When Donna began working with her adviser a decade ago, she was transitioning from work to retirement and needed an action plan. But building a retirement portfolio is like constructing a house, says Sheryl Garrett, of the Garrett Planning Network. “It’s a lot of work upfront. But once it’s built, all you need to do is clean it,” she says. “Unfortunately, a lot of financial planners price their services as if you’re building a new house every year.” Donna needs a handyman now, not an architect.

Garrett recommends that Donna discuss her options with Vanguard or Charles Schwab. She ought to be able to keep her mutual funds, or most of them, and match the funds to her tax situation. Then she should start courting local fee-only advisers and pick one who is willing to meet with her occasionally to review the risks and asset allocation but who won’t demand that she pay a percentage of her assets.

This article first appeared in Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine. For more help with your personal finances and investments, please subscribe to the magazine. It might be the best investment you ever make.

More from Kiplinger.com

See more stories in this category

Back to Previous Page

Ad Choices

Basics of Money

Good Reasons to Change Your Will

EDITOR'S NOTE: This article was updated in December 2011. After you've created your will and an estate plan,...

Learn the Ins and Outs of Long-Term-Care Insurance

Most older Americans have no insurance to cover the incredibly expensive long-term care often necessary when...

Master the Financial Aid Process

Applying for financial aid can be intimidating and confusing. That's why so many scams offer to do the work for you...

Should You Prepay Your Funeral?

Plan your own funeral? Hah. Most of us not only avoid talking about it, we manage to avoid thinking about it. Even...

No-Fault Insurance

Liability insurance is your main financial defense against catastrophic damage you might cause to others or...

Next Page >
Provided by Kiplinger

Explore

  • News
  • Watch TV
  • Games
  • Sports
  • Local
  • In Theaters
  • PC Safety & Security
  • Autos
  • Business
  • Careers
  • Family
  • Finance
  • Music
  • Shopping
  • Travel
  • Weather

My Account

  • Check Email
  • My CenturyLink Bill
  • Create Account
  • Forgot Password
  • Customize My Homepage
  • Add/Delete Mailbox
  • Username Management
  • Email Settings
  • Change Email Secret Question & Answer
  • Parental Controls
  • Access Management
  • Online Transactions
  • Block 3rd Party Charges on your Bill

Products & Services

  • Phone Book
  • Voicemail
  • CenturyLink Online Security
  • CenturyLink Toolbar
  • Games Pack
  • Learning Pack
  • Rdio Unlimited Music
  • Variety Pack
  • Broadband Home Security
  • Downloads

Help

  • Site Tour
  • Email Tour
  • Internet Support
  • Email & Homepage Support
  • Prism Customer Support
  • Chat Now
  • Email Us
  • Call 800.366.8201
  • Send Feedback
Ad Choices
Privacy Policy | Internet Terms & Conditions | Acceptable Use | Copyright Notices | Advertise with Us | AdChoices | About CenturyLink™

© 2013 CenturyLink, Inc. All Rights Reserved. The name CenturyLink and the pathways logo are trademarks of CenturyLink, Inc.