I have been a financial adviser since 2012. Over the years, I have been asked questions ranging from predictable to surprising. But one of the most surprising aspects of the job is when clients fail to ask major questions.
Investors might choose to work with financial advisers that they know, like and trust. Yet people often don't actually know their financial adviser that well.
Here are three questions that aren't asked nearly enough, and why they should be.
1. Are you a fiduciary? Sometimes? All the time?
The fiduciary standard "requires an adviser to act solely in the client's best interest when offering personalized financial advice," according to the Certified Financial Planning Board.
The majority of people assume the financial professional they are looking to hire or have hired is a fiduciary.
You may not know that the majority of financial advisers are not held to a fiduciary standard, but instead to a lower "suitability standard." The suitability standard requires a financial adviser to make sure the investment is "suitable" but not necessarily the best for you.
Imagine a scenario where your recommended investments aren't the best but are "suitable" for your goals, and the adviser or company can make more revenue by offering them. This is an example of conflicts of interest dictating what investments you may be recommended.
Currently, a wide range of people can say they are financial advisers, but most are not a fiduciary all of the time. Many are legally product salespeople that represent financial products and whose job is to make their financial firm money. Some advisers are a fiduciary part of the time and a salesperson other times.