Flying_Nun
Line Up and Wait
Anyone use a Fee-Only financial planner? Are the fees a percentage of assets under advisement or an hourly rate?
What was your overall experience?
Thanks.
What was your overall experience?
Thanks.
If you had invested $1,000 in the shares of Berkshire Hathaway when Buffett began running it in 1965, by the end of 2009 your investment would have been worth $4.8m.
“However, if instead of running Berkshire Hathaway as a company in which he co-invests with you, Buffett had set it up as a hedge fund and charged 2 per cent of the value of the funds as an annual fee plus 20 per cent of any gains, of that $4.8m, $4.4m would belong to him as manager and only $400,000 would belong to you, the investor.
Interesting comparison of Berkshire Hathaway as investment vehicle v. "2-plus-20" fee arrangements.
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/financ...-fund-illustrates-rip-off-management-charges/
Buy a no load mutual fund with lots of options within the fund family with not restriction on moving among them. After going to many free dinner seminars, they all wanted between $900 and $45K to manage my money. No guarantees and if your investment get smaller, the rate goes up. None has ever made me any money. I have done quite nicely doing it myself with a $75 per year monthly news letter with recommendations. Don't get greedy.
Then you probably need a good CPA who is well versed in tax laws. Hire one on a per hour basis.if I'm missing some opportunities around tax savings, etc. Since I've done okay on my own I'm looking more for advise than active management.