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Why would you have a disincentive to trade if the person is charging you by the hour? There is no way in hell I'd pay someone $10k/year to "manage" a $1M portfolio. Their advice is likely no better than throwing darts at a board full of Vanguard funds. Then again, I don't trust anyone with my money but myself, and sure as hell wouldn't pay someone 1-2% a year PLUS the fees for transactions/mutual funds/etc to tell me where to put it. Those fees could add up to $1M+ over the course of 40-50 years easily.
You misunderstand. First of all, the investor isn't trading squat. The advisor is. Also, the money isn't in the hourly, but the asset management fee. Your money is in a discretionary account. The advisor has a disincentive to trade, even when it might benefit you. One, it takes time to trade, two it generates trading fees. Either the advisor eats them, or passes them on to you. Neither is preferable. One eats into the profit, the other makes you go, "Why am I giving this guy 10k a year, plus another 5k for trades??"
This is also why RIAs are generally against insurance. It takes money out of the managed account. They get paid once and make a big time investment, but now that money isn't available for management fees.
And Franz is right, hedge funds are a completely different world.
Either you have ethics, or you don't. Fees or commissions, it doesn't matter, the person needs to constantly find new clients and keep their money under "management". You want advice completely unbiased by monetary concerns, find someone who makes the same whether you put money with them or not. Just don't expect competent advice.