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How I'm Compensated

There are several models of compensation in the financial industry. The key difference is whether the advisor is paid once at the start
or a percentage every year going forward.

Since starting in the business in 1982, I have earned my living primarily through commissions from insurance companies when clients choose certain products, such as annuities or life & LTC insurance. 

When a client purchases an annuity or insurance policy through me, the insurance company pays a one-time commission, which typically ranges from about 1% to 6% of the amount deposited, depending on the product.

Importantly, that commission does not come out of your account as a bill or ongoing advisory fee. It is built into the product pricing set by the insurance company.

In some situations, I also offer retirement income planning for a separate fee. Especially when someone wants a written strategy but may not be ready to implement or wants to implement elsewhere.

In either case there is always full disclosure of all commissions and any possible fees.

 

How This Differs from the AUM Model

Many large investment firms use a different structure for compensation called Assets Under Management (AUM). Here they earn money off your account each year, whether you make money or not.

These firms typically charge a percentage of the assets they manage for you each year.

For example:

  • A typical annual fee might range from 0.75% to 1.25% annually.

  • This fee is charged every year

  • The amount paid increases as your account grows

Over long retirements, these ongoing fees can add up significantly.

Here's what a 0.75% annual AUM fee can look like on $100,000, assuming a 6% annual return.

Assumptions

  • Starting investment of $100,000

  • Gross return of 6% annually

  • AUM fee of 0.75% annually

  • Net return after fee of 5.25%

The AUM fee starts at around $750 in the first year. But it grows, over 10-years the AUM fee totals about $12,000.

 

After 20-years about $42,000 in fees have been paid - that is an average of $2,100 per year.

By comparison, when an annuity is used, the compensation is typically a one-time commission from the insurance company of 1-6%. And that commission is paid by the insurance company.

 

When Each Compensation Model Makes Sense

There are clearly times when it makes sense to compensate your advisor with a commission and clearly times when it makes sense to pay an annual advisory fee.

And it is easy to know the difference.

If your account has the risk of loss and requires reallocating your portfolio using stocks, bonds, cash and other asset classes - then certainly pay an advisory fee. Your money requires vigilant oversight. 

If, however, your account does not require constant oversight - and that is what annuities and life insurance policies do not normally need - due to their conservative nature - paying an annual advisory fee makes no sense.

Annuities are long-term accounts. Meant to grow your money safely and then to provide you with additional income, when it is needed.

Regardless of compensation structure, my focus has always been the same: helping retirees turn savings into reliable income.

After more than 40-years in this profession, I've found that many retirees benefit from strategies that emphasize predictable income, simplicity, and long-term stability.

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