Argus Leader

Is the financial-planner friend living large on their life savings?

- Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com. | CAROLYN HAX

Dear Carolyn: My friend of almost 40 years is also my financial planner. Recently, I’ve discovered she has made some questionab­le moves with my life savings. Although we live thousands of miles apart, we speak frequently on the phone. When she comes to town, we always visit each other. However, I have yet to be invited to her place out west.

Lately, she and her partner have gone on many trips, and I wonder if I have been funding them? She has left several messages and is anxious to speak to me. Not sure how to broach the subject. Is she really a friend? Can this friendship be repaired? Is it time that I find a new financial planner?

Anonymous

Anonymous: Well, yes to the last one – but the time to find a new financial planner hit peak urgency the moment before you agreed to a business arrangemen­t with a friend. It’s just not a good idea to commingle friendship with financial management for every reason your letter encompasse­s.

It’s also time to start taking her calls again. You’re jumping to unsupporte­d conclusion­s and thinking the absolute worst of a 40-year friend without giving her even a chance to explain her work.

But I’m getting ahead of myself: You do not want to pick up the phone only to demand explanatio­ns for all your worst suppositio­ns. Merely accusing her of hiding her lifestyle from you and vacationin­g on your money is a friendship ender unto itself, so you don’t want to do that unless you’re beyond reasonable doubt and have all the smoking account statements in hand.

Since your informatio­n at this point seems to fall well short of that standard of proof and include some panicked speculatio­n, start by securing the expertise of a fiduciary financial adviser. Investigat­e what your adviser-friend did and why, and, if necessary, what remedies you have available to you. Then make your next decisions based on what you learn – hard facts only. Then you talk business with your friend.

Whatever your decisions turn out to be, please make sure what you do with your money is unaffected by friendship. Ideally, your friendship also will be unaffected by money, but, depending on what she did, it might be too late for that. Dear Carolyn: I’m new in the relationsh­ip thing, and I’m feeling like quitting already. My girl is free to say anything she wants but always corrects me in what I say, how I respond to people, whenever I say something. She does this to me anytime she feels like, and I don’t know if it’s OK.

New

New: Definitely not OK, in a general and objective sense. Unequal treatment between supposed equals is a clear warning to get out of that arrangemen­t, stat.

In a relationsh­ip sense, though, each of us decides for ourselves what is OK with us. If deep in your heart you do want to be corrected every time you speak for the rest of your life, then it wouldn’t be my place to stop you.

Here’s something OK in a general sense: It’s OK to walk away from a relationsh­ip “just” because you’re unhappy, even when it’s the only one you’ve ever had, even when you believe it’s fixable.

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