I’m constantly losing money on stock and cryptocurrency investments. And I paid for the advice that has given me the information that I’ve used to do this. For example, I was told to buy SoFi and lost money the whole time when I invested in it. What can I do?
I can hear your frustration oozing through this question. And I get it. After all, what’s the point of paying for financial advice if you’re not going to make money on the guidance you receive?
But before you fire your financial advisor (and you may want to after reading this), it’s important to review reasonable expectations about what a financial advisor can guarantee, how to avoid scams and bad actors and what to expect when it comes to market losses and gains.
A financial advisor may help you understand the pros and cons of certain investment decisions.
What Professional Financial Advice Can Do for You
It’s important to note that no financial advisor can predict the markets. Sure, advisors can use charts and historical models to make educated guesses. But you should view most claims of guaranteed investment returns with a healthy dose of skepticism. Individual stocks and cryptocurrencies both come with a great deal of risk, no matter who’s telling you to buy them.
Instead, what an excellent holistic advisor can do is help you formulate a financial plan that weathers market downturns and tamps down on exposure to risky or speculative financial products.
That financial plan may include stocks that do, at times, lose money. It could even include cryptocurrency investments that only comprise a reasonable part of your portfolio (read: money you’re willing to lose). But your funds should be diversified and placed into different buckets that allow your money to survive market downturns without bankrupting you.
For this assistance, you’ll typically pay a fee, often somewhere around 1% of assets under management (AUM). You may alternatively pay an hourly fee or per-project fee based on how your agreement is structured.
The Importance of Finding a Fiduciary
When finding a financial advisor, I typically recommend working with a fiduciary. That’s someone who is legally obligated to act in your best interest.
There are some shorthand ways to determine whether you’re working with a fiduciary financial advisor. Certified financial planner (CFP) professionals must be fiduciaries. Advisors listed on SmartAsset’s platform are also fiduciary advisors. You can also ask when interviewing potential financial advisors whether they’re fiduciaries and if they act in that capacity at all times.
I like to share this information because anyone can call herself a “financial advisor,” even someone hawking risky financial products on YouTube or selling shares of an investment on Facebook. If you’re getting advice that seems off, consider who you’re getting it from and whether the person is required to act in your best interest when making that recommendation.
Identifying Scams and Fraudsters
While it’s not necessarily bad form for an advisor to suggest or pick individual stocks, I wonder if these selections were presented to you clearly. Fiduciary financial advisors can’t protect you from all market losses, but they should suggest investments that complement your overall portfolio and caution you against overexposure to certain assets.
Any advisor worth his or her salt isn’t going to tell you to invest more than you can afford in a single cryptocurrency or security.
Checking an advisor’s record for disciplinary actions or complaints can help you feel identify bad actors in the space. A few ways to vet your financial advisor include:
Use FINRA’s BrokerCheck. Enter an advisor’s or firm’s name into BrokerCheck, a free tool, which will give you arbitrations and complaints, licensing information and regulatory actions.
Use SEC’s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure. This tool, which ties to BrokerCheck, also allows you to view information about an investment advisor and its business operations.
Check their credentials. Licensing such as the Series 7 allows advisors to sell securities. Plus, CFPs and chartered financial analysts (CFAs), for example, must pass a series of educational hurdles and adhere to professional standards.
Can Your Financial Advisor Protect You Against Market Losses?
Short answer: No. A financial advisor, even an ingenious investment manager, can’t guarantee that your portfolio will always be in the black. Unless you’ve got your money squirreled away in a few savings accounts or certificates of deposit, you’re likely going to ride the market’s gyrations, no matter who’s giving you investment advice.
Some things an advisor can do include:
Help you design a diversified investment strategy with a risk profile that matches your investment time horizon and stomach for risk.
Assist in placing money into “buckets” for short-, medium- and long-term goals.
Suggest investments or strategies that can help you meet your financial goals.
Give you the freedom to play around with money in individual investments. But a good advisor will encourage you to only “gamble” with money you can afford to lose. Many advisors suggest that cryptocurrency, for example, take up no more than 2% to 5% of an investor’s portfolio.
Bottom Line
Paying for advice doesn’t guarantee that you’ll avoid all market losses. But if you’re feeling squeamish about the way these investments were presented to you and how they were described, it’s worth reviewing your financial advisor’s credentials and assuring you’re working with someone legit.
Investing Tips
If you have questions specific to your investing and retirement situation, a financial advisor can help. Finding a qualified financial advisor doesn’t have to be hard. SmartAsset’s free tool matches you with up to three financial advisors who serve your area, and you can interview your advisor matches at no cost to decide which one is right for you. If you’re ready to find an advisor who can help you achieve your financial goals, get started now.
If your investments pay off, you may owe the capital gains tax. Figure out how much you’ll pay when you sell your stocks with our capital gains tax calculator.
Susannah Snider, CFP® is SmartAsset’s financial planning columnist, and answers reader questions on personal finance topics. Got a question you’d like answered? Email [email protected] and your question may be answered in a future column.
Please note that Susannah is not a participant in the SmartAdvisor Match platform.
Photo credit: ©Jen Barker Worley, ©iStock.com/Jirapong Manustrong, ©iStock.com/Viorel Kurnosov
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Source: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/ask-advisor-im-losing-money-163430213.html