Hooverfish
Registered User
- Messages
- 209
Disclaimer: just by being in a position to be looking for advice, I do realise my partner and I are fortunate.
But I must be missing something basic. I don't get how you can receive impartial financial planning/investment help or advice in Ireland. What I've found so far:
1. All the investment companies pay commission. So you end up paying extra for your investment whether or not you get independent advice because if your advisor isn't getting the commission then it is just paid internally to one of the company's reps who clearly isn't working on your behalf (Karl Deeter summary on a recent radio interview)?
2. Very few qualified financial planning advisors offer fee-based services. Where they do the cost seems to be around €1000 per person, but then you still have the issue of how to "execute" the chosen investments - see 1. I have been told by one commission-based advisor that the reason almost no advisors operate fee-based is because they tried it and people didn't actually pay their bills. Eh? Would you not ask for part of the money up front if that was the issue?
3. In searching for help I have been told "it's because the Irish market is too small, so we have to operate on commission unlike the UK. But the law changes mean you are protected because you get to see what commission is being paid to your advisor". But that doesn't mean, operating on commission only, that you can be sure your advisor has shown you the best options in the first place? Just that you know what commission they are getting so you get to choose between their selected options? What about recurring management fees?
4. There is one thing you can check, which is whether the advisor has any qualifications https://www.centralbank.ie/regulati...thorisation/minimum-competency/qualifications but I'm not really clear which qualifications are "just turn up" and which ones involve wide-ranging knowledge, numeracy and skill.
So, as far as I can work out, you just have to "hope" you have found someone honest with a qualification and trust them on a commission basis (nod, wink, referral?). Or pay a whack of a fee for advice that is hefty, unless you have a lot of money to invest? What level of investments would you need before coughing for independent advice would be worthwhile? And for fee-based advisors, why is it €2000 for a couple when the work involved, if the information is all to hand, is pretty similar to that for a single person?
I may just have been spectacularly unlucky in the people I've spoken to so far. And, of course, you can post here! But reading back through the forum it looks like requests to find advisors don't get many replies.
And I'm not asking for free advice. We want someone we can trust to work for us, and for them to be paid for their skills. This does exist in some areas (eg paid advice on the health insurance market). But I'm going round in circles, especially as we look to be moving into an era where you will pay to have savings, not get any interest...
What steps would you take to find good professional advice?
But I must be missing something basic. I don't get how you can receive impartial financial planning/investment help or advice in Ireland. What I've found so far:
1. All the investment companies pay commission. So you end up paying extra for your investment whether or not you get independent advice because if your advisor isn't getting the commission then it is just paid internally to one of the company's reps who clearly isn't working on your behalf (Karl Deeter summary on a recent radio interview)?
2. Very few qualified financial planning advisors offer fee-based services. Where they do the cost seems to be around €1000 per person, but then you still have the issue of how to "execute" the chosen investments - see 1. I have been told by one commission-based advisor that the reason almost no advisors operate fee-based is because they tried it and people didn't actually pay their bills. Eh? Would you not ask for part of the money up front if that was the issue?
3. In searching for help I have been told "it's because the Irish market is too small, so we have to operate on commission unlike the UK. But the law changes mean you are protected because you get to see what commission is being paid to your advisor". But that doesn't mean, operating on commission only, that you can be sure your advisor has shown you the best options in the first place? Just that you know what commission they are getting so you get to choose between their selected options? What about recurring management fees?
4. There is one thing you can check, which is whether the advisor has any qualifications https://www.centralbank.ie/regulati...thorisation/minimum-competency/qualifications but I'm not really clear which qualifications are "just turn up" and which ones involve wide-ranging knowledge, numeracy and skill.
So, as far as I can work out, you just have to "hope" you have found someone honest with a qualification and trust them on a commission basis (nod, wink, referral?). Or pay a whack of a fee for advice that is hefty, unless you have a lot of money to invest? What level of investments would you need before coughing for independent advice would be worthwhile? And for fee-based advisors, why is it €2000 for a couple when the work involved, if the information is all to hand, is pretty similar to that for a single person?
I may just have been spectacularly unlucky in the people I've spoken to so far. And, of course, you can post here! But reading back through the forum it looks like requests to find advisors don't get many replies.
And I'm not asking for free advice. We want someone we can trust to work for us, and for them to be paid for their skills. This does exist in some areas (eg paid advice on the health insurance market). But I'm going round in circles, especially as we look to be moving into an era where you will pay to have savings, not get any interest...
What steps would you take to find good professional advice?