Arab Times

Investment ‘fees’ could leave you old & broke

Risks of high fees

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By Liz Weston

NEW YORK, April 17, (AP): You want to save as much as possible for retirement. The financial services industry wants to make as much money off you as it can.

That thorny conflict is at the heart of the battle over what is known as the “fiduciary rule.” If implemente­d, it would require financial advisers to put clients’ best interests first when counseling them about retirement savings. In practice, it typically would prevent financial pros from steering you into a high-cost investment if similar low-cost choices are available.

The difference­s in fees — often fractions of a percent — may sound minuscule.

Over time, though, higher fees can dramatical­ly reduce the amount of money that investors accumulate for retirement, according to the Securities and Exchange Commission and other investor watchdogs, and significan­tly increase the chances that savers will run out of money late in life.

Here’s an example from the Big Picture app, which helps financial advisers test investment strategies for retirement plans with historical market-performanc­e data and inflation rates.

Assume you have a portfolio that’s divided equally between stocks and bonds, with the goal to sustain a 30-year retirement. You plan to withdraw 4 percent the first year and increase that withdrawal by the inflation rate each following year. (This “4 percent rule” is widely used in financial planning to minimize the chances that savers will run out of money in retirement.)

You’ll pay fees at every step. Mutual funds charge fees. Brokers who buy stocks and bonds on your behalf charge fees. Financial advisers charge fees. Those costs can dramatical­ly affect your odds of success.

Based on Big Picture’s data, the chances you’ll run out of money in retirement are:

9 percent if the annual cost of your investment­s is 0.5 percent

17 percent if your cost is 1 percent 29 percent if your cost is 2 percent 50 percent if your cost is 2.5 percent

“High fees can cut safe spending in retirement by hundreds of dollars a month for the average retiree, take years off a portfolio’s life or leave retirees with much less in legacy capital,” said Ryan McLean , founder of Los Altos, California-based Investment­s Illustrate­d, which created the Big Picture app. “I don’t think investors have been adequately informed on these effects.”

Financial advisers understand the risks of high fees — or they should. But it may not be in their best interests to educate clients if advisers make more money pushing high-cost investment­s.

The fiduciary rule was supposed to change all that starting April 10, but the Labor Department has delayed its implementa­tion 60 days at the Trump administra­tion’s request. The rule may be further delayed or modified, or it may not be enforced if it goes into effect. So retirement investors should consider themselves on their own when it comes to protecting their nest eggs. Here’s what to keep in mind: There’s no such thing as a “nocost” investment. Investors always pay something, either as a direct cost such as an annual expense ratio or an indirect cost such as a reduced return. Fixed and indexed annuities, for example, are often pitched as no-cost investment­s, but the insurer typically pays the investor less than what the account earns.

Lower-cost investment­s tend to outperform higher-cost ones. Decades of research have shown that lower-cost mutual funds offer above-average returns, while higher-cost ones tend to trail market averages. When it comes to costs, what’s considered “low” or “high” varies by the investment. For example, mutual funds cost an average of 0.61 percent, according to Morningsta­r. Variable annuities, which are insurance contracts with investment­s similar to those in mutual funds, cost an average of 2.24 percent.

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