Product Description
“For anyone who needs to understand different types of life insurance, as well as considerations for purchasing and managing policies, this book should be on your nearby reference shelf. If you’ve frequently found yourself fumbling around with terminology, such as the differences between variable, universal, and variable universal life (VUL) policies, you’ll finally see some light through the haze.” – MorningstarAdvisor.com Life insurance doesn’t have to be complex or intimidating. Ben Baldwin’s completely revised and updated guidebook makes it clear and logical, discussing how to analyze insurance products based on their investment merits and best overall financial returns. This clear, authoritative res… More >>
Posts Tagged ‘Advisor’
New Life Insurance Investment Advisor: Achieving Financial Security for You and your Family Through Today’s Insurance Products
My financial advisor is suggesting I switch my stocks to an annuity to keep me from losing money. ?
I am 58 and don’t have the time to wait for a long recovery. I feel nervous about locking up my money for 7 years. I have lost half my money already. I am scared to do anything, My advisor wants to protect me while my friends all say don’t do anything. Just wait this out. The difference in advise has made me so confused. I am curious what others are doing to protect theirselves.
Questions for a financial advisor? My grandmother is 85 and….?
A financial advisor is recommending that she purchase an annuity. I am completely against this, but I thought I would ask the question on here. What type of annuity would make sense for someone of this age and what are the benefits of doing this? Also, if not an annuity, what would you recommend? She is concerned about going into a nursing home and it sucking up all of her net worth.
I want to be a Financial Advisor.?
I have my Iowa life insurance license and want to specialize in selling annuities thru seminars and lead cards. I am looking for someone to mentor me and train me. If any one has any good advise or connections with this industry please let me know.
I am 55, small fixed income. I have $200K to last 30 years. A financial advisor recommends: $30K in income &?
$170K in an annuity which I can start getting a guaranteed income in 7 years to last 30 years (and able to withdraw after 7 years without a penalty). Is that sound advice? I am very new to this so any help would be greatly appreciated.
The Annuity Advisor 2nd edition
Product Description
Every financial professional should read and refer to this completely updated annuity resource. Delivered in an authoritative, yet easy-to-read language, this guide provides an objective discussion of what annuities can and cannot do, their costs, and the risk management features that annuities offer.
Whether you are an attorney, CPA, financial planner; anyone who advises clients regarding financial matters should read and refer to this completely updated annuity resource. Delivered in an authoritative yet easy-to-read language, this guide provides an objective discussion of what annuities can and cannot do, their costs, and the risk management features that annuities offer.
The Annuity Advisor, 2nd… More >>
The Annuity Advisor 2nd edition
Has anyone been a financial advisor here?
I was given a job offer from a company that sells mutual funds, life insurance, annuities, college savings 529, fixed. How do you actually make money on this career. It seems you have to sell to all of your friends and family otherwise you won’t get enough clients. Anyone have experience doing this? Thanks.
I was offered $30,000 for the first year base + commissions. This sounds really good for a recent college grade but I don’t want to bug my friends and family every day to sell something.
Selecting An Investment Advisor
This newsletter has been developed to provide insights into the operation of the financial services industry, and to help individual investors make decisions concerning the type of advisement that best suits their needs. While there are many professionals who provide investment advice in one form or another, there are certain credentials and licenses financial professionals should possess before you entrust them with your savings. We will explore the various licenses and certifications to determine which type of professional might be best suited to your needs.
Financial Advisor, Financial Consultant, Investment Advisor, Financial Planner, Registered Representative, Stock Broker, Variable Products Agent or Insurance Agent are many of the terms used in the financial services industry to describe the professional duties performed. Fee based or commission based compensation are terms which get thrown into the mix, causing client confusion. In reality, a licensed professional can have all of those titles, perform all of those services, which we just identified, and work in a fee or commission based capacity with a client.
The National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) is one of the associations which self regulates the securities industry. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is the government agency which oversees the NASD and the exchanges, such as the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). The NASD licenses Registered Representatives, while the SEC or individual state bureaus of securities register investment advisors (RIA). Financial Planner, Financial Consultant or other terms used to describe financial services professionals are other ways to describe an RIA. Insurance Agents are licensed by individual state Departments of Banking and Insurance. If the agent sells variable products, such as variable annuities or variable universal life insurance, they must also have an NASD License.
The NASD has many licenses, but many professionals have at least a Series 65, which is an NASD license needed to be a Registered Investment Advisor in many states. This is the minimum, short of having no license at all. In order to be a Registered Representative, the minimum license needed is a Series 6 from the NASD. This entitles a Representative to sell mutual funds, and obtain an affiliation with a securities firm. An insurance license to sell variable products enables the representative to also provide variable annuities or variable universal life insurance.
In order to advise and transact stock, bond, REIT and limited partnership sales, as well as mutual fund, ETF’s, variable annuity and variable universal life sales, a Registered Representative needs to attain a Series 7 license, as well as a variable life license. By obtaining a Series 63, disclosing all investment advisement relationships to their broker/dealer and by registering with their state Bureau of Securities or the SEC, if assets are over 25 million, a registered representative can have a dual registration as a Registered Representative and Registered Investment Advisor. Once this stage has been reached, an Investment Advisor can demonstrate to a client whether fee based or commission based compensation is best for the client.
Annuities – Are They Good For You or Only Your Financial Advisor?
Annuities have received a lot of bad press recently, and much of it for good reason. Life insurance agents and securities brokers often foist annuities upon their clients without properly explaining them or ensuring that the annuities fit their clients’ needs.
Why? Because annuities typically pay handsome commissions to the salespeople. But does this mean that annuities are always bad? Given the right circumstances, fixed annuities and variable annuities could be the right financial vehicle for you.
What Are Annuities Anyway?
Annuities are life insurance products designed to provide supplemental income, mostly for retired people. The term “annuity” literally means “annual payment of allowance or income.”
Basically, annuities tend to work like this: Someone pays a set monthly premium, as with life insurance, for so many years. Then, when he’s done paying, he waits for a while. A few years later, he begins receiving monthly income.
The amount he is to receive, usually for the rest of his life, is generally much greater than the total amount of premiums he paid in.
Fixed Annuities – The Original Version
Fixed annuities work much like the example above. The key thing is that with fixed annuities, investors are guaranteed a set pay-out. Almost no other investment product guarantees anything, and that’s why fixed annuities are actually a form of insurance, not securities.
The big problem with fixed annuities is inflation. While the money you pay in premiums is generally less than you’re guaranteed to receive, when you adjust for inflation, you might be losing out. This is one of the reason annuities have gotten so much bad press recently.
Variable Annuities – New and Improved?
Variable annuities protect you against inflation risk by investing your premiums more aggressively. The downside? While variable annuities guarantee lifetime income, they do not guarantee how much that income might be. In fact, you could even lose money by investing in variable annuities.
For this reason, many of the more ethical financial advisors recommend that you buy a modest life insurance policy and invest the premiums you save into solid mutual funds.
To Be Fair – The Upside of Annuities
Theoretically, annuities could be a great investment vehicle. Rather than “throwing away” life insurance premiums, annuities can provide for a death benefit while simultaneously allowing your money to grow.
Also, when compared to mutual funds, annuities offer several advantages. For one, the money you invest grows tax deferred. This means that you will not be required to pay income tax on the funds invested into an annuity until you begin withdrawing money.
Secondly, variable annuities do guarantee lifetime income, while theoretically at least, you could lose all of your money invested into mutual funds.
In practice, this is unlikely, but at least with an annuity you will be able to plan for the worst case scenario of a guaranteed lifetime benefit. The worst case scenario for mutual funds is $0.
Mutual Funds and Variable Annuities – A Side-by-Side Comparison
Maximum sales load: Mutual fund, 8.5 percent; variable annuity, no maximum. This means that unethical brokers can charge unsuspecting clients any sales charge that they want.
Pricing: Mutual fund, net asset value (NAV) calculated once per day; variable annuity, unit value calculated once per day. Mutual funds have the major advantage of being liquid – you can buy or sell them any business day of the year. A variable annuity is a life insurance product and is not liquid at all.
Share value: Mutual fund, depends on performance of the fund; variable annuity, depends on the performance of the “separate account,” in which a portion of premiums paid are invested.
Make Sure That Your Financial Advisor is Looking Out for Your Interests
If you feel that your financial advisor is more concerned with her own commission revenue than your financial well-being, head for the door and never look back.
Financial advisors are supposed to be professionals, not cheap salespeople. Like doctors and lawyers, their duty is to those whom they serve, not to the company that employs them or to their own paychecks.
Older individuals are especially susceptible to hotshot young brokers who think they can score a quick buck by unloading a junk product with a big commission.
Your best defense against this is to become as fully educated as you can about each investment product that’s recommended to you, and to find a financial advisor with references from people you know you can trust.
A Few Questions to Ask Your Advisor
If you’re ever dubious of a product your advisor is recommending, be sure to ask him how much commission he receives for selling it. Come right out and ask if he would recommend the product if the commission were half or one-third what it is.
Ask him what are some products that he recommends that do not provide such high commissions. And if you really want to rattle your advisor, ask him what score he received on the Series 7 exam. Ask him to show you his certificate proving his score.
Tell him that you’re considering a variety of advisors, and these are the criteria you’re using to determine which one is right for you. It’s important that he remembers that you are his boss, and that he is to put your interests ahead of his own. That’s what being a professional is all about.

