Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Thoughts on Robo Advisors II


Last week I ended my blog by asking if a client was receiving the help he needs to retire comfortably. If the answer was “yes”, that’s a good start. If the answer was “no”, I said he has work to do.

But I didn’t say what he should do. That response needs context.

The targets for discount robo-advisors are investors who currently pay full service advisors for automated money management. Most investors I’ve met couldn’t tell if their portfolio was actively managed or indexed. Discounters helpfully point out if it is indexed, why pay a middleman when they can save a percent (or so) a year by doing it themselves?

To my way of thinking; this assumes the client’s primary goal is to own a generic portfolio at a bargain price. I make the case that if he doesn’t even know what he owns, why does he own it in the first place? You invest for goals. Are these the right holdings for those goals? Maybe his advisor can answer that. That’s not a lock either but it’s the first place to ask.

I don’t use the same portfolio process as robo-advisors – either the full-service or self-serve versions. But like I said last week, personal advice matters more than which prudent asset management you use. Leaving stocks and bonds alone this time, here are two structural concerns about robo-advice I think are harmful:

The first is the enrollment process. Every packaged portfolio I’ve ever seen starts with an in-depth questionnaire about the client’s situation, objectives and concerns. Often it’s the front half of the new account form.


It is my unshakeable belief that the average investor doesn’t have the experience or the temperament to answer those questions in his or her own best interests.

That especially applies to risk.

Clients express risk emotionally. For a lot of people, market losses hurt more than gains feel good. Some are sure declines are permanent. They are sure the next drop is the big one. They can’t even open their statements. Some investors salvaged what they could in 2009 and bought gold and canned beans to survive the end of civilization.

In this business, risk is cold, hard numbers. The robo-computer has to translate that tangle of unresolved angst into a binary response. After you’ve answered enough questions with feelings, you get a canned portfolio based on your fears – not your goals.

Reducing market volatility is a tactic, not a goal.

Not being old and broke is a goal.

Putting your churlish daughter through grad school is a goal.

Whoever asks those questions needs to know your goals first so you can prioritize. In all but the wealthiest cases, there are compromises to make between what you have, what you want and what’s possible.

My second concern is that after you get your automated portfolio, you are supposed to suddenly have the self-discipline to hold it through the worst markets without any emotional support.

Ask the canned-bean investor (or his wife) how that’s working out.

One of my favorite after-school movies was Ulysses with Kirk Douglas.[i] Remember him lashed to the mast in writhing torment as the Sirens tempted him with songs of love and loss? He would have gutted his ship on the rocks if he hadn’t told his men to stuff wax in their ears and row for their lives – no matter how he begged them not to when his stress became unbearable.

The Sirens of financial entertainment sing new reasons to wreck your ship 24/7. You need experienced oarsmen to ignore them and row you where you need to be.

If the value of avoiding those just two (of plenty more) possible mistakes isn’t worth many times the cost difference between human advice and robo-advice, either you don’t need it (rare) or you aren’t getting it.

Back to last week’s blog; I hope dad doesn’t fire “that broker”. I’d like to believe that in those 20-something years, they’ve carefully planned for mom and dad to live the rewarding, dignified retirement they deserve.

I’d like to believe that for all of us. sh


The opinions expressed here are those of Skip Helms and do not necessarily reflect those of LPL Financial or anyone else. Investing involves risks, including the loss of principal. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Please consider potential transactions carefully and read all appropriate materials before investing or sending money. Securities and advisory services offered through LPL Financial, a registered investment advisor. Member
FINRA/SIPC




[i] Ulysses: All rights reserved by Lions Gate Films, Inc.

Monday, November 9, 2015

Thoughts on Robo-Advisors


If you watch sports on TV, you’ll see a commercial with a man and his adult daughter jogging up a hill. She asks him if he is still with “that broker” and he says, “for 20-something years”. She presses if he is getting good value for his portfolio management fees. He doesn’t know.

The advertiser has a long history of trying to separate investors from good advice. Now they’re offering advice – after a fashion. It’s perfectly legal but I think his daughter asked the wrong questions.

Welcome to the world of robo-advice.

Some of the ready-made portfolios offered in the retail space these days use automated asset management. That’s been the norm for some full-service advisors for years. Now the same management process is available for do-it-yourselfers. They can save a percent a year (or thereabouts) in fees without the middleman. Advisors whose only visible contribution to their clients’ financial needs is shoveling money into a computer are vulnerable – and rightly so.

If you’ve seen my podcasts, you know I don’t use (or like) the Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT) method used by robo-advisors – discount or full-service. My view is that if you don’t have appropriate investments, what you pay for them is irrelevant.

But just this once, I’m going to side with “that broker” because:

Investment management should be the lesser component of a successful financial relationship. The more important part is advice.


Assuming you are getting – and you must be getting – exemplary personal service, an advisor must do three things that are worth many times more than the one percent or so he adds to asset management costs:

One is crafting a plan to help you get where you need to go. If you could do it yourself, you would. There are too many variables. You don’t get a lot of chances either. The people who rely on you get fewer still.

Two is adding long-term historical perspective. Your plan needs wisdom and experience. Wisdom is steadfast and boring. The people shouting for your financial attention can’t sell boring. All you get is noise.

Most critically is providing behavioral coaching in times of stress. The herd sells in panics and buys at tops. You need a deep, human relationship with an advisor to keep you on track even when your emotions are screaming for you to do anything else. A robot will never talk you off the ledge.

If the value of those three things isn’t obviously far, FAR greater than a percent, either the advisor isn’t doing them or he hasn’t explained how he earns his keep.

The daughter should have asked,

“Is that broker helping you and mom create a comfortable retirement?”

If the answer is “yes”, there is value in the relationship. If the answer is “no”, dad has work to do.

Next week I’ll get into more detail on why investors should be careful with robos.
I can’t end this without thanking Mr. Nick Murray. Nick is an advisor to advisors and I’ve been listening to and reading him for twenty eight years. A lot of what I just said I owe to his insights.

I highly recommend you visit nickmurray.com and buy a copy of “Simple Wealth, Inevitable Wealth”. It’s a book for advisory clients explaining what they should expect and the role they play in a successful investment relationship. I don’t get paid anything for this. If you only ever buy one book on realizing your dreams of financial independence and confidence, this is it. Very readable too!

Then be sure to give it to someone you love.

Thanks for reading! 

SH


The opinions expressed here are those of Skip Helms and do not necessarily reflect those of LPL Financial or anyone else. Investing involves risks, including the loss of principal. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Please consider potential transactions carefully and read all appropriate materials before investing or sending money. Securities and advisory services offered through LPL Financial, a registered investment advisor. Member FINRA/SIPC