Thursday, July 2, 2009

Wealth Without Wall Street

Wealth Without Wall Street

“Wall Street's world turned upside down”
These were the headlines in 2009.
Wall Street financial management has proven itself worthless. Bill Gross was right. “Professional money management is a gigantic rip-off.” Only 2 advisors provided their clients with the correct advice about the total collapse of the market in 2008-9. In one year, most money management clients have seen their accounts plunge 40%, 50% even 70%. No advisor has fired him/herself. No advisor has returned their advisory fees and commissions. In fact, most advisors hid from their clients during the worst of the storm, as acknowledged by Fidelity executives in May 2009.

The naked truth—YOU must build wealth without Wall Street.

What to do?

Look at Wall Street “turned upside down.”

First, when money managers buy and sell securities in their mutual and hedge funds, they are trying to predict the future of the market. There is no proof this can be done over time. Yesterday’s winners are usually tomorrow’s losers. The AVERAGE market return has been 12%, so a few managers will beat the average by luck—Just not the same ones every year. www.Ifa.com/12steps/Step3/Step3Page2.asp#333
Second, you must pay the costs of the manager, her/his marketing group and operations, whether or not s/he makes you a dime. It is always better to pay as little as possible for the same performance over the long term. Costs can take up to 33% of your returns, over time. Investors averaged only 2.57% annually from 1984 through 2002 despite buying the ‘winners’ at the top. www.DALBARinc.com
Third, managers are paid for increasing “ASSETS under management,” not for making you rich. Bringing in more assets is a full-time job. It is expensive to market the funds given that there are now thousands available. It is inevitable that popular funds will grow until they produce average returns with high expenses. Managers want to be rich, not right. It takes luck to pick successful stocks. You do not benefit from economies of scale. As assets grow, fees do NOT shrink.
Fourth, there is much less chance of you being treated poorly by fund management if the structure and governance are customer-oriented like Vanguard’s and TIAA-CREF’s are.
Fifth, many professional managers and Wall Street “insiders” place their core assets in index funds. As bond guru, Bill Gross, said, “professional money management is a gigantic rip-off.”
Sixth, since no manager can consistently beat the market, a mutual fund or hedge fund for that matter, must be evaluated as a commodity. Commodities are usually judged on price. As Benjamin Graham, legendary value investor, said, “Investors should purchase stocks like they purchase groceries—not like they purchase perfume.” Actually, all financial services should be purchased this way—insurance, mortgage, credit, banking.
Seventh, due to changes in access and technology, some manufacturers of financial services and products have decided to enhance their direct to customer channel. Even though Vanguard funds have not been sold by personal selling, it has grown to rival most fund complexes. Discount brokers are now considered to have better customer service than brokerage firm services, according to Consumer Reports. Even though Progressive Insurance is sold by agents, their success in the direct channel has been impressive.
Eighth, Wall Street cannot reduce the risk of investing. Most individual investors have lost 30% to 50% of their life savings in the last Wall Street bubble. Many investors now realize that Wall Street is selling snake oil. Even the promise of diversification has left many realizing that “experts” can’t control risk.
Ninth, Wall Street used to control price—raising the price of investing to grow revenue directly lowers investor returns. The advisor or fund with the highest price does NOT guarantee success: only expenses to investors.

Investors can now control the price. We can use low-cost mutual funds and brokers. Since Wall Street cannot predict the markets and we don’t know if stocks will outperform all other assets over time, we must take the Pascal wager:

Pascal’s wager: The consequences of not being in the markets are worse than being in it for the long haul. Buying the market returns at the lowest price is the best solution for long-term wealth-building. You are better off without “professional” advice.

Example: Member Ron Delaney of New York will gain $400,000 because he asked about his 401k plan. Mutual fund fees are the largest source of overcharges—$400,000—over time. Ron did not believe pension costs were as high as we said. He asked his HR person about the costs of his 401K plan. He received a packet of materials. Finally, he calculated that his annual expenses were 2.1% and his annual fee was $50. His plan offered index funds for just 0.70%. He picked which funds he needed after reading our FREE Guide*. Ron saved $2,800 ($4200-$1400) every year. By the time Ron retires, he may have added an extra $400,000 to his 401k.

Your choice is clear—avoid Wall Street. Their “advice” is just marketing hype. Their research exists to sell their products. Take the advice of unbiased advisors like master investor Warren Buffett,

By periodically investing in an index fund, for example, the know-
nothing investor can actually out-perform most investment
professionals. Paradoxically, when "dumb" money acknowledges its
limitations, it ceases to be dumb. http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/1993.html


* http://www.theinsidersguides.com/index.html

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