Updated
Updated · OregonLive · Jun 7
Liz Weston Urges 5- to 10-Year Standalone Plan Before Hiring Long-Term Advisor
Updated
Updated · OregonLive · Jun 7

Liz Weston Urges 5- to 10-Year Standalone Plan Before Hiring Long-Term Advisor

1 articles · Updated · OregonLive · Jun 7

Summary

  • A retired couple seeking a clearer 5- to 10-year roadmap was advised to pay for a standalone financial plan before committing to ongoing investment management.
  • Weston said many fiduciary fee-only advisors bundle planning with assets-under-management fees because AUM arrangements are more lucrative, but that model does not fit every client.
  • A flat-fee plan lets clients test an advisor’s approach, communication and attention to detail before handing over substantial investment assets, cash reserves and home equity.
  • For retirees, she said the plan should cover insurance, taxes, asset allocation and estate planning, with added focus on sustainable withdrawals, long-term care, fraud protection and cognitive decline.

Insights

Could paying thousands for a standalone financial plan be a costly vetting mistake?
With long-term care costs soaring, can any financial plan truly protect your retirement savings?
Should a flat-fee 'trial plan' become the new industry standard for all financial advisors?