| August 26, 2008 - "6
questions to ask your financial advisor"
Summary: Hedge Fund manager Doug Kass shares 6 questions you
should be asking your financial advisor. If someone has your money,
make sure you hold them accountable to be the best!
"Common sense is not so common." -- Voltaire
In the final analysis, 2008 is turning out to be an environment in
which serious and adaptable investors are separating their performance
from those that have historically gone on the ride (and have worn
analytical blinders) of ever-rising share prices.
As a result, weak investment processes will be uncovered, as will poor
logic of argument and even laziness.
Money tends to go where it is best treated, as measured by an asset
class, hedge fund or by a traditional investment adviser. As a result, a
lot of money will be shifting by year-end, and it is bound to have a
disruptive market effect as well as likely to feed continued volatility.
If you delegate investing to an adviser, here are several questions
that you may consider asking during a 2008 year-end review of your
investment performance:
1. What were your adviser's expectations for the stock market's
returns in 2008, and how did these expectations compare to the actual
results?
2. How did your investment performance compare to that of the
major indices? In what areas did you outperform, and in what areas did
you underperform -- and why?
3. What was your adviser's economic and credit expectations,
and how did these expectations compare to the actual events? Where and
why were his assumptions wrong?
4. Did your adviser change his strategy as economic and
financial events changed? If he didn't, ask why?
5. Did you experience outsized individual stock or large
specific industry or sector share price losses? Did your adviser
institute a discipline to stop losses, or were your losses allowed to
compound? Did your adviser "double down" on poor investments?
6. Ask your adviser whether he "eats his own
cooking" -- that is, did he invest along with you in the same
investments, and are both of your interests aligned?
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