Financial Advisor Hidden Fees: How To Protect Yourself (2024)

Financial Advisor Hidden Fees: How To Protect Yourself (1)

Two weeks ago, I was chatting with a reader who was researching low cost index funds. I was so excited because he wanted to learn about expense ratios, commissions, fees, and more. Although I talk about finance all the time, it's still rare to have someone interested for long periods of time.

After chatting for a bit, I got around to asking him what made him so interested in the topic. He seemed like he was doing well enough. He definitely had some investable funds, was on his way to retirement, and everything seemed good.

He told me - "I feel like my advisor isn't steering me in the right path based on what I read online on sites like yours." I asked him to elaborate a little bit for me.

He said - "My advisor consistently talks about how he's the top performer in North Carolina. However, everywhere I read online says to invest with low cost Vanguard funds. When I mention that to him, he changes the subject or diverts to other topics. It makes me feel off..."

Beyond the fact that you shouldn't feel this way with a financial advisor, I firmly believe that your financial advisor should be very transparent with costs for you. When this reader shared his portfolio with me, I was so sad...

Table of Contents

Investment Fees Explained

How This Reader Was Getting Shafted By Fees

What A Low Cost Portfolio Looks LIke

Investment Fees Explained

How This Reader Was Getting Shafted By Fees

This reader had his account and financial advisor at one of the biggest two name financial firms in the country. For this privilege, the reader was paying a fee of $40 per year for the first account, $20 per year for the second account, and $48 per year for his retirement account.

On the surface, paying a financial advisor just $108 per year is a good deal. My reader was annoyed by these fees, especially since his financial advisor would "blame them on the DOL Fiduciary Rule and Big Government", but when realizing they were pretty low, he felt better. But the fees don't really stop there.

Where he was really getting shafted in fees was in his portfolio. This advisor put him in the following funds:

Fund Name

Symbol

Expense Ratio

Front-End Load

Dealer Commission

Hartford Balanced Fund - Class A

ITTAX

1.14%

5.75%

4.75%

Hartford Dividend & Growth Fund - Class A

IHGIX

1.03%

5.75%

4.75%

Hartford MidCap Fund - Class A

HFMCX

1.16%

5.75%

4.75%

Hartford Equity Income Fund - Class A

HQIAX

1.02%

5.75%

4.75%

Hartford MidCap Value Fund - Class F

HMVFX

0.83%

0%

0%

Hartford International Opportunity Fund - Class I

IHOIX

0.88%

0%

0%

American Funds Growth Fund America - Class A

AGTHX

0.64%

4.50%

3.50%

American Funds AMCAP Fund - Class F3

FMACX

0.37%

0%

0%

American Funds Growth Fund - Class 529A

CGFAX

0.72%

5.75%

4.75%

What's important to note here is that these arereally expensive funds to own. Not only are there front-end sales loads on many of these funds, they have very high expense ratios, and many charge 12B-1 fees as well.

Furthermore, it's weird the asset choices. We didn't go into too many details on account types, but he did share that his advisor was managing a regular account, a retirement account, and a 529 college savings plan. So, my guess is that in the retirement account, he want with some of the no-load funds because he couldn't justify the large sales load as a fiduciary.

So here's the scary part. Look at how much he was paying in fees (in dollars) to this "financial advisor":

Symbol

Dollar Amount

Sales Charge

Commission Fees

Annual Expense Fees

ITTAX

$40,000

$2,300

$1,900

$429.78

IHGIX

$40,000

$2,300

$1,900

$388.31

HFMCX

$40,000

$2,300

$1,900

$437.32

HQIAX

$20,000

$1,150

$950

$204.00

HMVFX

$20,000

$0

$0

$166.00

IHOIX

$10,000

$0

$0

$88.00

AGTHX

$10,000

$450

$350

$64.00

FMACX

$10,000

$0

$0

$37.00

CGFAX

$9,000

$517.50

$427.50

$64.80

Total

$199,000

$9,017.50

$7,427.50

$1,879.21

Ouch....do you see how much this guy pays on his $199,000 portfolio - WAY TOO MUCH!

And this financial advisor - he's making $7,427.50 in commissions on top of his $108 per year advisory fee. When you add in the expense ratio, this portfoliois costing the investor $11,004.71 in year 1.And potentially costing the investor $1,879.21 or more per year after!

I should also mention that it's highly likely this individual is "rebalancing" his clients portfolios at least once a year - which means more commissions in his pocket. All at his client's expense.

What I don't think he realized was that his $40,000 investment started at $37,700 because of this sales charge - so he was already investing at a disadvantage. Then, you add the huge annual fees on top of it!

I personally think this is very wrong. And what compounds the problem is that this advisor wasn't transparent with his client. If an advisor is transparent and someone wants to pay - that's one thing. But when the client is left in the dark on the true costs of their investments - in my opinion that should be criminal.

What A Low Cost Portfolio Looks LIke

Looking at this guys portfolio, I don't even know if it really makes a lot of sense.

But, for argument's sake, let's say it does. Could we build a much lower cost portfolio? 100% yes.

Here's what a similar low cost portfolio looks like. Notice I combined a couple of funds into the same fund for large cap growth. The investments he was in didn't make sense - but it could be do to retirement account choices.

Also, we chose a Vanguard 529 portfolio to mimic the existing 529 plan. Plan choices may vary, and it could make sense to open a state-specific plan.

Symbol

Expense Ratio

Dollar Amount

Sales Charge

Commission Fees

Annual Expense Fees

VBINX

0.07%

$40,000

$0

$0

$28

VDADX

0.08%

$40,000

$0

$0

$32

VIMAX

0.06%

$40,000

$0

$0

$24

VEIRX

0.17%

$20,000

$10

$0

$34

VMVAX

0.07%

$20,000

$0

$0

$14

VTIAX

0.11%

$10,000

$0

$0

$11

VIGAX

0.06%

$10,000

$0

$0

$6

VIGAX

0.06%

$10,000

$0

$0

$6

Fund 4517

0.24%

$9,000

$0

$0

$21.60

Total

$199,000

$0

$0

$176.60

By simply investing in a low cost portfolio, we were able to reduce total costs from $11,004.71 to just $176.60. That's a 99% reduction in costs.

Let's say that you even want to pay a fee-only financial advisor to help you set this up. Well, that would likely be a one-time cost of around $1,000. Even if you add that in, you're only paying $1,176.60 in year one, which is 90% less than you would with this financial advisor.

Not only that, but the annual fees are significantly lower. The original portfolio was costing the investor $1,879.21 per year! This new portfolio with low cost mutual funds is only costing the investor $176.60 per year! A 91% reduction in annual expenses!

What Types Of Fees (And Words) To Look Out For

In today's world, you can invest for free. There are multiple services, and many of the big companies, that have commission-free ETFs, no account minimum IRAs, and free stock trading.

And the price of financial advice has significantly fallen as well. If you want a robo-advisor to invest automatically for you, Betterment charges just a 0.25% annual fee.

The fact is, you should be focused on avoiding fees - fees are the biggest cost for investors over the long run. So minimizing them should be your top priority. But what do you need to watch out for?

Sales Load/Loaded Funds -The biggest fee that hit our reader was the sales load. Almost all the funds that his financial advisor placed him in were "loaded" - meaning they charged him a fee to invest. In this case, it was almost always 5.75% up front. And the financial advisor received a commission from that load of 4.75%.

Do you see why financial advisors can be incentivized to steer clients to loaded mutual funds? That was where the big money was for this advisor. The annual fee was nothing (just $108 per year). But this advisor was making almost $7,500 in commissions on this investor.

Even worse, we were able to find less expensive funds for all the investments this financial advisor placed his client in. My opinion is that this is not in the client's fiduciary interest. I really wonder how the financial advisor would justify it in court if he was sued?

The bottom line is, avoid mutual funds that have a sales load. You can do better.

Expense Ratio -The next biggest fee to be extremely mindful of is the expense ratio. This is the percentage of your investment that you'll pay each year to the mutual fund/ETF company. It's an annual fee - so it compounds with your investment.

Many basic ETFs and mutual funds have expense ratios of less than 0.25%. The best expense ratios are down 0.03% to 0.06%. If you notice in our reader's story, not only was he sold loaded mutual funds, but each of these funds had expense ratios over 1%. That's incredibly high (and in my opinion, should be outlawed).

Typically, your expense ratio will be lower with stock index funds, and higher with bonds and international funds. The fees are just higher for these types of investments. The bottom line here - look for the lowest expense ratio possible.

Commissions -Commissions are what you pay your broker to invest. For example, Fidelity has $0 commissions for stocks and ETFs, and many commission-free mutual funds as well.

You should look to avoid commissions where ever possible. But don't avoid commissions at the expense of higher expense ratios.

For example, if you have a commission-free fund at 0.10% expense ratio, and an ETF that you'll pay $4.95 for, but has just a 0.06% expense ratio - go with the lower expense ratio. Since it's a percentage of your investment, that's more money than any commission! But note, as of 2020, most brokerages are commission-free for ETFs anyway.

In this example, if we invested $20,000 - the expense ratio at 0.10% is $20. At 0.06%, it's $12 per year - a savings of $8 per year - already overcoming the commission expense of just $4.95.

"Top Financial Advisor" -If you ever hear a financial advisor boasting about being the top financial advisor in their firm or area, seek clarification. You see, many firms internally rank their advisors by how much money they bring into the firm, or by how much commissions they're earning.

As an investor, these could be the opposite metrics you want from your financial advisor. You don't want to work with the advisor earning the most commissions - because they are charging you those commissions!

Now, some rankings can be helpful, but just do your due diligence before working with anyone.

My Dream For How Honest Financial Advisors Would Disclose Their Fees

The sad part of this is that it takes a lot of time and effort to figure out what you're actually paying your financial advisor. I spent about an hour researching the fees, expense ratios, and commissions that the financial advisor was receiving for this article. And most people won't be spending their time doing that.

I really with more advisors were up front, honest, and transparent about their fees. It's why I really like fee-only financial planners. You pay a flat fee up front and get a financial plan that you can execute.

However, I don't even know if that goes far enough for what people need to know about their investment fees. I think that we've come a long way in disclosing fees for mortgages, car loans, credit cards, and more - but investments are still a very dark area.

I wish that honest financial advisors would put together a one-pager fee disclosure, and would be required to go over it with clients. The client would then have to sign off on it.

I envision it like this:

Financial Advisor Hidden Fees: How To Protect Yourself (2)

I've uploaded a Word Document of this form if anyone wants to use and/or modify it. You can download a copy here: Investment Fee Disclosure Form

I think this type of form would bring a high amount of transparency to the costs associated with investing, financial advice, true fiduciary interest, and more.

Final Thoughts

I really hate it when I see readers in a bad situation. I don't think it's right how this reader's financial advisor setup his investments. However, this is sadly a common practice and I've heard of it quite a bit.

It's one of the reasons why I decided to not go into financial services after interning at a brokerage that was doing similar things. It just felt dirty.

In today's world, you can setup a low cost portfolio and save thousands of dollars in fees. If you want or need advice, pay for it - but just make sure you fully understand what you're paying for and all associated costs.

If you're not comfortable even managing your portfolio after getting a financial plan, then looking at a robo-advisor service like Betterment is a great way to go. For a small fee (0.25% of assets), they take care of everything start to finish. All you have to do is transfer money into the account - so simple.

The bottom line is that you don't need to be gouged to get solid financial advice. And you should ALWAYS know what you're paying.

What are your thoughts on this? Have you been taken advantage of (or seen it happen)? Do you think the fiduciary rule should be stricter in disclosing investment costs and fees?

Financial Advisor Hidden Fees: How To Protect Yourself (2024)

FAQs

Is a 1% fee for a financial advisor worth it? ›

The short answer is yes. Ken Robinson, certified financial planner at Practical Financial Planning, says while a 1% fee may be common, advisers who charge based on AUM are increasingly scaling down from 1% at lower thresholds in the past. But if you get a lot of service, the 1% fee isn't always a bad thing.

Should my financial advisor have access to my bank account? ›

It is essential to recognize that your financial advisor's role is strictly advisory. They cannot make decisions or access your funds without your permission. You must make the final decision on whether to withdraw funds or invest your money.

Is your money safe with a financial advisor? ›

An advisor who believes in having a long-term relationship with you—and not merely a series of commission-generating transactions—can be considered trustworthy. Ask for referrals and then run a background check on the advisors that you narrow down such as from FINRA's free BrokerCheck service.

Should I pay a financial advisor or do it myself? ›

Ultimately, there's no one-size-fits-all answer — some people, like those who tend to be more experienced, knowledgeable and disciplined might work better with an hourly fee adviser while others are probably better off having a pro mind the shop.

Is 2% fee high for a financial advisor? ›

Most of my research has shown people saying about 1% is normal. Answer: From a regulatory perspective, it's usually prohibited to ever charge more than 2%, so it's common to see fees range from as low as 0.25% all the way up to 2%, says certified financial planner Taylor Jessee at Impact Financial.

At what net worth should I get a financial advisor? ›

Generally, having between $50,000 and $500,000 of liquid assets to invest can be a good point to start looking at hiring a financial advisor. Some advisors have minimum asset thresholds. This could be a relatively low figure, like $25,000, but it could $500,000, $1 million or even more.

What is the normal fee for a financial advisor? ›

Your adviser's fees will be based on many things: what advice you need, how much time it will take, and the size of the assets involved. Advisers often charge between 1% and 2% of the asset in question (e.g. a pension pot), with lower percentages being charged for larger assets.

What is a red flag for a financial advisor? ›

Red Flag #1: They're not a fiduciary.

You be surprised to learn that not all financial advisors act in their clients' best interest. In fact, only financial advisors that hold themselves to a fiduciary standard of care must legally put your interests ahead of theirs.

Should you tell your financial advisor everything? ›

It might come as a surprise, but your financial professional—whether they're a banker, planner or advisor—wants to know more about you than how much money you can invest. They can best help you achieve your goals when they know more about your job, your family and your passions.

When to fire your financial advisor? ›

If you notice hidden costs or feel you're being overcharged, it's time to reevaluate the relationship. Mismatched investment philosophy: Your financial advisor should align with your investment goals and risk tolerance.

What happens if a financial advisor loses your money? ›

The short answer is yes—if your financial advisor has acted negligently or fraudulently, then it may be possible to sue them for damages resulting from their advice or actions. Advisors are held at a high standard, so any breach of trust or duty can be grounds for a lawsuit.

What power does a financial advisor have? ›

A financial advisor can help you develop a holistic financial plan and serve as a trusted counselor as you implement and amend your strategy over the long term. This guidance can create a smoother financial journey, and help you better manage life's inevitable ups and downs.

How often are financial advisors sued? ›

However, there are other less obvious guidelines you must adhere to so you can avoid getting sued as a financial advisor. In 2022, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) received 11,180 investor complaints—less than the 14,311 received in 2021 but far greater than the 5,400 received in 2020.

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