How Advisors Are Compensated
Early in my career, I worked at a discount brokerage. We were paid mostly in salary with some incentive pay based on how many transfers we brought to the firm and how much was invested into fee-based asset management portfolios. I had a client looking for safe investments to put some cash into. He didn’t want any risk and preferred cash or cash equivalent things. I discussed the .01% interest we were paying on cash, the short-term CDs we had, and the characteristics of a short-term bond-managed portfolio. Those options didn’t fit what he was looking for, and they paid a lower rate of return than some online banks. He then asked me, “What would you do?” Again, I reiterated the three options that my firm offers, which I would get paid incentives on if he did. He got quiet for a moment and then said something I have tried my best to do ever since. He said, “The right answer is to do what will get the best return for me.”
A Short History of How Advisors Are Compensated
How did we arrive at the current relationship between advisors and clients, and where does an advisor’s paycheck come from? Let’s take a short walk through the history.
For a long time, financial advisors were known as stock brokers. They charged commissions for placing trades. They were always happy to give stock recommendations to get someone to place a trade. For every trade made, the broker made money. The more trades they placed, the more money the broker took home. This was a flawed compensation model. Because it puts the success of the advisor and the success of the client on different things. Clients made money if the stocks they bought increased in value, and brokers made money when clients placed trades. Churning, or placing unnecessary trades, became a problem and is still a part of ethical training and discussions in the industry (even though most trades placed in the last 6 years do not include commissions; see how slow the industry changes!)
Then came the age of Assets Under Management (AUM) models. This was a big step in putting the client’s and advisor’s success on the same page. Clients paid for the investing management, and advisors got paid for how much money they managed. The advisor made more income as AUM increased through appreciation or additional client deposits. In this model, people paid for asset management, not financial advice.
More recently, people found they needed guidance through complicated financial situations. Answering questions like “Can I retire?” “how do I make sure my estate is set up correctly?” or “How can I effectively manage my tax bill?” became more important for people. Since investors were already paying their asset managers, they wanted the asset manager to have the answers. Advisors who traditionally were managing money started adding services to meet this need. Concurrently, investing costs have also decreased substantially. Low-cost ETFs, commission-free trades, and robo-advisors are some innovations that have made investing more affordable. These asset managers were able to capitalize on the lower investing costs and shift some resources to answering financial planning needs. However, advisors’ compensation has stayed tied to how much the advisor manages and is not attached to the advice.
Do AUM Fees Cause Conflicts of Interest?
There are so many really good advisors who work under the AUM model. They are true fiduciaries, putting their clients' interests before their own, and they don’t consciously let their income sway their advice. However good-intentioned these advisors are, the truth of the situation remains.
Since advisors’ incomes are tied to asset management, they focus on billing client assets rather than on the depth and quality of their advice. Advisors are incentivized to do as little as possible in the planning area and increase their AUM to make money.
In what ways could the AUM model create conflicts of interest?
- Financial planning becomes a means of getting more assets to manage and ignoring other possibilities that could “be in the best interest of the client.”
- Advisors make recommendations to invest instead of paying off debt.
- Advisor not recommending investment products outside their firm because they don’t get compensated on that recommendation, even if they are superior.
- Doing financial planning “lite” means spending more time gathering AUM instead of taking the time needed to find in-depth financial planning needs.
- Not recommending delaying taking social security when it’s the best option. This means withdrawals from the billable assets can be delayed. Advisors make this recommendation or let the client believe it’s the best option so the advisor can bill on more assets longer, even when it would have worked better to withdraw from the billable assets while waiting for higher social security payments later.
- Rolling over a 401k to an IRA even if the 401k plan is lower cost and a better investing fit because the advisor can’t bill on the 401k. This also happens when advisors ignore the fact that 401ks have an early retirement withdrawal propensity at age 55, and IRAs don’t.
The Solution
We need to align the client’s success with the planner’s success. When we untie compensation from investing and AUM and tie it instead to the advice, including investing recommendations, that will better align the advisor’s planning and investing advice with what is best for the client. No matter where or what that is or where they are invested. That way, advisors won’t be stuck between where their pay comes from and “doing what is in the client's best interest.” Flat-fee financial planning advisors have started to fill this area. Since they are compensated for the planning and advice, they can make unbiased recommendations on insurance, estate, investing, tax, rollover, and other areas that matter. Then, they can survey the whole market to help identify the best places to implement the recommendations, regardless of AUM.
Conclusion
The world of financial advice has come a long way since the early days of the stockbroker. Through the years, the industry has changed a lot to better focus on clients and their needs and remove conflicts of interest. We are at a time when this alignment between clients and advisors is taking a giant leap forward. With low-cost investing and unbiased client-centric advice available, there has never been a better time to be an investor.
Let’s have a no-obligation introduction: https://calendly.com/bountiful-planner/introduction-meeting
I’m excited to hear from you!
Alan B. Faerber CFP®, CRPC