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I agree and disagree with you.
The 9.1% (using your number) is not a 'front-end load', but a total net cost to the client over a 10-year period. Because it's spread out, it cannot be considered a 'front-end load'.
However, everything else, I generally agree. What does the client GET for their 1% fee per year? If I have a $1 million RIA client... what do they get for their $10,000/year working with me? And is it really WORTH $10,000?
- I can deliver an economic weather report every quarter. (That's boring and I have no control over the economy anyway.)
- I can update their retirement plan (but any fee-only advisor could charge up to $1,000 per year to update that.)
- I can verify and re-verify their beneficiary designations. (Not hard to do.)
- Ensure that their portfolio risk level is commensurate with their risk tolerance every quarter? (Not hard to do either. Just move them from a 4 down to a 3, or whatever.)
- Access to "institutional money managers" with strategic and tactical asset management strategies. Still no guarantees against losses for paying those fees.
- Ego boost that you're investing like institutions invest. (I think that's about it.)
The main thing that the investor gets... is a "pay as you go" investment relationship. You don't pay the "load" of A-shares all up front. Plus, the advisor is assured of ongoing compensation versus just 12b1 fees.
Which means that it's easier to get out of the RIA investment and only pay for the TIME you spent with that advisor. Plus, the advisor has an incentive to help (however they do it) to make sure your portfolio grows with proper recommendations and to keep the client happy. Yet, 'happiness' is not a definable or measurable barometer of success.
I keep reading articles that state that clients are happy as long as advisors continue to reach out to them with updates on a periodic basis. But, as you stated, in the RIA, that 'happiness' is rather expensive over time.
I saw an article today that talks about what clients are looking for in an advisor.
In [Investment Management Consultants Association's] Investor Sentiment Survey of 1,000 investors, 93 percent said it was "important" or "critical" that their advisor “helps them maintain a long-term investing approach,” and 83 percent wanted their advisor to help them “stay calm when the market drops.”
In addition, 80 percent of those surveyed who had $1 million or more in investable assets said it was important or critical that their advisor help them stay current on the latest tax law changes, while 63 percent off the investors surveyed said “providing access to cutting-edge investment strategies” were important or critical.
So, according to this survey at least, what we're getting paid for is a) helping our clients look at the big picture and b) educating our clients. Is that worth $10k to someone that's investing $1M?
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