Here are five tips from experts on finding a reliable professional financial planner.
It's no secret that all doctors have plenty of financial issues to
address, including student loan debt, children's college funds,
retirement planning and estate planning. But since very few actually
have the time to manage them, many physicians hire a financial planner.
And financial planners know it.
Scads of financial planners cater to doctors' concerns, but
underqualified or shady planners can be much too easy to find. Here are
tips from sources within the industry designed to help you search for a
planner you can trust with the fruits of your livelihood.
1 Find a professional match.
Everyone interviewed for this article recommends finding an advisor who
you're comfortable with. "That means, obviously, meeting face to face,"
says Caroline Coderre, a certified financial planner and certified
divorce financial analyst for the Darrow Co., which has offices in Los
Angeles and Concord, Mass. She continues: "Has the advisor asked plenty
of questions? Do you have a sense that he or she really understands
what you're trying to get at?"
"You want to look for somebody you can build a long-term relationship
with," advises Mitchell Kraus, a CFP, Chartered Life Underwriter and
Chartered Financial Consultant with Capital Intelligence Associates in
Los Angeles. "A younger physician would probably want to look for a
younger planner; an older physician could use an older one or a younger
one, depending on what their goals are," he says.
Your level of comfort indirectly impacts the quality of advice you will
get. "The more that [clients] are able to share all their personal
information, the better the results are going to be," Kraus says.
Coderre agrees, "I think a good advisor, through their questions, may
uncover issues and concerns that you've never even thought about."
The California Medical Association's affinity partner, Mercer Advisors,
has written a book on financial planning for physicians and dentists.
Members receive $500 off of Mercer's Economic Freedom Program, a
detailed analysis of their current financial position and goals for the
future.
2 Scrutinize credentials.
"I'd say 80 percent of [financial planner designations] are not worth
much at all," says Mark Wilson, a CFP and Accredited Pension
Administrator at the Tarbox Group in Newport Beach and an occasional
spokesman for the CFP Board of Standards.
"I'm kind of a snob," Wilson says. "If I see that people have listed
[insubstantial] designations, I actually think they're on the wrong
side of the fence, because they're trying to push these designations as
if they're something that's useful." For example, Wilson holds the
Certified Senior Advisor designation in low regard.
The Financial Planning Association, which Kraus sometimes speaks for,
holds up the CFP as the best designation. While he knows planners
without credentials who are talented and trustworthy, and credentialed
professionals who are "crooks," Kraus maintains that solid credentials
are good indicators of knowledge. In addition to his own CLU and ChFC
designations, he also trusts the Life Underwriter Training Council
Fellow credential.
Paul Temby, a CFP, CDFA, and Chartered Financial Analyst at Dowling
& Yahnke in San Diego, adds Registered Investment Advisor to the
list of solid professional designations.
For insight into financial planners' ethics, find their records with
the CFP Board of Standards or the Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority. "Make sure that they don't have any dings against them on
their record, and if they do, that they can explain them," Kraus says.
3 Favor fees over commissions.
Rather than doing commission-based planning, fee-for-service planners
use a scale that's relative to the assets managed. "Ideally, the fee
will be less than 1 percent for the first million dollars, and probably
less than half a percent once you start getting over several million,"
Temby says. He also recommends picking a planner using a tax-sensitive
approach that takes into account the higher taxes on short-term capital
gains versus long-term.
"We tend to find that [doctors] are looking for the fee-only
model-mostly because we do more comprehensive planning for them, so
that way we don't have any conflicts of interest [concerning
investments]," Coderre says. To guard against such conflicts, she
counsels directly asking advisors whether they have a fiduciary
obligation to act in the best interests of their clients. "Believe it
or not, that's not always a requirement, depending on the compensation
model," she says.
4 Understand which services will be in-house.
In the same vein as avoiding conflicts of interest, make sure you know
who will be involved in your planning. "Some planners may provide
certain services in-house, such as investment, insurance, tax
preparation, even estate planning," says Edward Ramsey, a CPA, CFP and
Certified Healthcare Business Consultant at Ramsey and Associates in
Greenbelt, Md. An advertiser in this magazine, Ramsey plans to open
offices in Southern California. "The compensation has to be clear to
the doctor, [insofar as] who gets paid what." Regarding insurance, "if
a financial planner refers a doctor to an insurance agent to buy a
$20,000 per year premium, they should at least be asking, 'Is there a
referral relationship?'"
5 Ask for documentation.
Also, make sure you ask for a Form ADV, Ramsey says. "Just asking that
question-to ask for that document-immediately gets the doctor to the
point that the planner thinks that this person has already talked to
somebody else or has done his homework."
You can find Part 1 of the form, which contains 10 years of information
on an advisor's education, business and disciplinary history, on the
Securities and Exchange Commission's Investment Adviser Public
Disclosure Web site at www.adviserinfo.sec.gov. Part 2 presents an
advisor's services, fees and investment strategies.