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IFA Fees
choi
Posts: 163 Forumite
Are there any IFAs prepared to work on a payment by results basis
In other words
If they say you will get 4% return and you do get this then they get their fee
If it underperforms they get less
Obviously there would need to be a pre arranged fee arrangement
I would even be prepared to share of a higher return than predicted or offered
Most other professionals work in this way
They provide a service
They get paid
If service is not up to the mark
They dont
In other words
If they say you will get 4% return and you do get this then they get their fee
If it underperforms they get less
Obviously there would need to be a pre arranged fee arrangement
I would even be prepared to share of a higher return than predicted or offered
Most other professionals work in this way
They provide a service
They get paid
If service is not up to the mark
They dont
0
Comments
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The thing is no IFA should ever say that you should get a certain return because it is out of their control. They surely wouldn't want to commit to a payment option where they only get paid if they are lucky. Also, return isn't the primary goal - it could be a return based upon a certain level of risk - or some other criteria. So you would be encouraging them to take more risk than required just to get paid.
How do you judge an IFA. Its often very subjective and takes a number of years before you can tell. I can't see anyone wanting to work on that basis.0 -
Thrugelmir wrote: »Care to name professions that do?
Yes
Me
Before I retired
I provided an agreed service for a client
When I had completed the work I was paid
I never expected payment until I completed agreed work
Relating performance to service is erroneous. Performance is not something which can be controlled.
I just think we should try it my way
Too many IFAs get away with making projections for what look like unsubstantiated returns
With the magic words
Can go up as well as down0 -
I just think we should try it my way
Too many IFAs get away with making projections for what look like unsubstantiated returns
With the magic words
Can go up as well as down
So you could end up with the situation where the IFA recommends a lot of high risk/high reward recommendations to maximise his (and your) income returns.
Then they all crash and burn, he loses a bit of income and you could have lost 50% of your pension. He just points at the 'investments can go up as well as down' statement and shrugs his shoulders.
No thanks0 -
So you could end up with the situation where the IFA recommends a lot of high risk/high reward recommendations to maximise his (and your) income returns.
Then they all crash and burn, he loses a bit of income and you could have lost 50% of your pension. He just points at the 'investments can go up as well as down' statement and shrugs his shoulders.
No thanks
In my situation that would not happen
Nor should it happen in any other situation
IFAs should listen and propose
Their proposal should be aimed at the clients best interest
The client should confirm acceptance
The client provides the fund
The IFA should not have a no risk path to payment of fees0 -
I am sure there are lots of great IFAs
Unfortunately the ones I have met all seem to be the same
Invest your cash with me over ten years and you will get 4% return
If all goes well
You might get more
You might get less
Meanwhile
Pay me 1.5% to set this up
And 1.4% pa for ten years
Come what may
Comments
Why so much to set up a plan
For me it looked like they were dusting off a ready made plan
The pa fee looks very high for tweaking a preset plan
On my investment fund of £250k the costs seem very high and must be paid
But the returns may or may not be acheived0 -
Well, i can tell you one investment manager whose IT does indeed charge by results (and as a result, isn't charging)
So, perhaps not a winning strategy?
Its also more than crude to judge by results as simply as you put it. 4% (for example) would be in the context of long term results, it cant possibly be on a per year basis.
It must also be matched to risk level eg the investments should outperform or match a benchmark.
So if investments at your risk level fell say 20% then a 4% performance would equate to your investments only dropping 16%. Or if they rose 10% then you'd want 14% not 4%.
If you have got to the stage of realisation that IFAs do indeed know no more than what you or my cat know about next years market performance, then either use them on the basis they will stop you doing soemthing stupid, or see if you can do better.
I pay my IFA what he deserves, and if he's been inept, he gets nothing..... but i do DIY
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AnotherJoe wrote: »Well, i can tell you one investment manager whose IT does indeed charge by results (and as a result, isn't charging)
So, perhaps not a winning strategy?
Its also more than crude to judge by results as simply as you put it. 4% (for example) would be in the context of long term results, it cant possibly be on a per year basis.
It must also be matched to risk level eg the investments should outperform or match a benchmark.
So if investments at your risk level fell say 20% then a 4% performance would equate to your investments only dropping 16%. Or if they rose 10% then you'd want 14% not 4%.
If you have got to the stage of realisation that IFAs do indeed know no more than what you or my cat know about next years market performance, then either use them on the basis they will stop you doing soemthing stupid, or see if you can do better.
I pay my IFA what he deserves, and if he's been inept, he gets nothing..... but i do DIY
Great reply clearly outlining the issue
It is obviously a complex issue and there are no easy solutions0 -
Many times the argument is made that when you need a particular service you should employ a professional; so for a leaky pipe you get a plumber and for money issues you employ an IFA. You expect the plumber to fix your pipe before they get paid, but the IFA wants to be paid even if they fail to get the return they project. You are in fact paying the IFA for advice, which should meet some professional standard, not for a guarantee that you will make money. The thing is that the advice and the services are usually pretty simple and the "specialised knowledge" is easy to attain and understand once all the jargon is removed.“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”0
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Do you refuse to pay your car mechanic because the traffic's been bad, therefore you shouldn't have to pay him because he's failed to make your car go fast?0
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