Investment Management vs. Financial Planning (Part 1)
Posted by Mark on April 13, 2018 at 06:40 | Last modified: November 30, 2017 06:06One other comment on Dr. Mark Perry’s July 2014 blog post addressed financial planning and investment management:
> At the higher asset levels in particular, clients of the major
> full service firms are likely to be serviced by teams, some of
> whom may have CFAs, law degrees or other advanced degrees
> and designations.
These are the investment managers and this is the first description I have seen of “people/entities like myself.” In lieu of my expensive pharmacy degree, I find “law degrees” to be interesting. I think both place heavy emphasis on critical thinking.
Contrast the above description with this excerpt from study.com on typical education for a financial advisor:
> While there may be no official [education] requirements…
> most employers prefer those who have a college education.
> Some colleges and universities offer undergraduate and
> graduate degree programs in financial advising. Degrees
> in business, accounting or finance is also recommended…
>
> Coursework in financial advising programs often includes
> investing tactics, retirement planning and insurance…
I would like to see a syllabus for the average investing course(s).
> Certificate programs in financial advising are available for
> those who already hold a degree. These programs are offered
> online, on-campus or through professional workshops. Options
> for financial advising certificate programs can include
> risk management, tax planning and employee benefits.
The reader also listed other financial planning* activities. I like this better than my brief list:
- Proactively calling when it’s a good time to refinance your mortgage(s), handling all the tax return information, paperwork, and seeing it through to closing
- Specific-expense & cash flow financial planning
- Assiduous year-round tax loss harvesting
- Proactively coordinating 1099 delivery to your CPA at tax time
- Complimentary review of trusts and estate structures by an on-staff attorney
- Quarterly in-person performance review vs. global balanced benchmarks
- Private equity capital-call liquidity planning
- Review of life insurance products and applicability
- Social security optimization
- Retirement planning
- Educating adult children about capital markets, investing, and capital preservation
>
I would want a colleague with related expertise to handle all but #6, perhaps. I think the investment manager is in a better position to discuss performance.
With regard to fees, Investopedia interviewed Arden Rodgers, financial advisor with Arbus Capital Management:
> You may want to hire a financial advisor to manage investments…
> [they] usually charge a percentage of your… AUM each year.
> This… fee can vary based on a number of factors including the
> expertise of the manager… the size of the firm… investment
> strategy… amount of money you are investing [but] the typical
> range of AUM fees for investment managers is 0.5% to 3.0%.
Once again, my 2% seems reasonable.
In summary, between investment managers, financial advisors, financial planners, and investment advisors (not to mention “advisers” or “advisors”—both of which are acceptable), the industry is somewhat of a mess. My brain wants to create some boundaries where none may really exist.
>
* As one further layer of complexity, “Financial advisor” is not necessarily the same thing as “financial planner” particularly>
when a professional has the Certified Financial Planner credential.