Does My RIA Need Live-Trading Experience? (Part 1)
Posted by Mark on July 8, 2014 at 06:54 | Last modified: January 28, 2015 07:22The question left on the table from my last post is whether live trading experience provides Edge for clients in the market for an investment adviser (IA).
I definitely see a disconnect in the financial industry because so many IAs (or investment adviser representatives–a legal term) do not actually trade: they just sell products. Whether or not this live trading experience provides superior returns remains an open question, though.
I Googled this and e-mailed one person purporting to be an IA with 15 years of trading experience. He responded:
> I’ve been an active day timeframe trader for more than 16
> years, but that is by no means all I do. In a nutshell, I
> manage everything from a long term investment portfolio,
> to positions running anywhere (in trade duration) from a
> few minutes, to a few days, weeks or even months.
>
> As far as an investment adviser trading for him/herself,
> and, I assume, for clients…that is a very tricky
> proposition. I know there are many readers that follow
> my work that DO in fact manage and trade money for
> outside clients, but I have no clue how their results
> measure. There is simply no way for me to know whether
> an investment adviser with an active style has any sort
> of edge over a typical adviser. Some probably do well,
> while many break-even or simply lose.
I this is an outstanding response. So many things in the financial industry cannot or are not measured. Without measurement, they are simply advertising claims. For what I would do, yes: live trading experience is absolutely necessary. For this reason, I could advertise Edge based on my live trading experience. Does this mean live trading experience in general provides an edge over most IAs who focus on sales?
That’s an answer I do not know and, in agnostic fashion, is an answer I’m not sure I ever can know.
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