Los Angeles Times

Finding the right financial advisor.

Be wary. A more accurate descriptio­n for some people who use that title might be ‘product salesman.’

- By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I have met with a financial advisor, but he wants every investment to go through him. Although he is an advisor, he works for a company and wants me to buy their products. I’m a little resistant about this. What’s your advice?

Answer: Anyone can call himself or herself a financial advisor or a financial planner. There are no education, experience or ethics requiremen­ts for using those titles. A more accurate job descriptio­n for this guy might be “product salesman.” He may not charge you upfront, but he’ll make commission­s from those products and will recommend them even if there are better, cheaper options available.

If you want someone who puts your interests first, look for a fee-only advisor who’s willing to act as a fiduciary. “Fiduciary” means the advisor promises to act in your best interests. And don’t confuse “fee only” with “fee based.” Fee-only advisors are compensate­d only by their clients. Feebased advisors may charge their clients while accepting commission­s for the products they recommend.

You can get referrals to fee-only advisors from the Garrett Planning Network at www.garrettpla­nningnetwo­rk.com and the National Assn. for Personal Financial Advisors at www.napfa.org.

If you want someone to give you comprehens­ive financial planning advice, make sure that he or she has the appropriat­e credential such as Certified Financial Planner (CFP) or Personal Financial Specialist (PFS) and that you verify the credential with the group that issued it (the CFP Board of Standards for the CFP, and the American Institute of Certified Public Accountant­s for the PFS).

If all you want is help with investment management, though, you may not even need an advisor right now. “Robo advisors” offer automated portfolio management using computer algorithms.

Robo-advising began with start-ups like Betterment and Wealthfron­t and it’s now offered by more establishe­d companies, including Charles Schwab and Vanguard.

Cleaning up ‘small dings’ on your credit

Dear Liz: I have several small dings on my credit. I’m now in the position to pay them off, but how do I know my credit will be improved? Should I call the companies and ask if they will remove it if I pay in full and get it in writing?

Answer: Paying off collection­s won’t help your credit scores, and creditors rarely agree to delete collection accounts in exchange for payment. You can ask, but don’t count on this as a way to improve your credit. The best way to recover from “small dings” is to use credit responsibl­y in the future. That means paying bills on time and using less than 30% of your available credit on your cards. You don’t need to carry balances to improve your credit.

More on how to avoid estate taxes

Dear Liz: You recently answered a question about what a wealthy couple could do to reduce future estate taxes, and you mentioned the annual exclusion. They also could pay education and medical expenses for anyone, and there’s no annual limit. Answer: Absolutely — and the couple’s estate planning attorney almost certainly would have informed them of this option.

The original letter came from one of the couple’s children, asking what their parents could do to reduce future estate taxes, in addition to the irrevocabl­e trust that already had been set up. The reader lamented that the estate was bigger than the current exemption limits (now $10.98 million for a married couple) and so could incur estate taxes.

My answer was that the couple’s attorney would have told them of other options. One of those options is to use the annual exclusion of $14,000 per recipient to gift tens if not hundreds of thousands of dollars out of their estate. If the couple chooses not to use available options, and instead lets the estate incur the taxes, there’s not much the heirs can do about it.

Liz Weston, certified financial planner, is a personal finance columnist for Nerd Wallet. Questions may be sent to her at 3940 Laurel Canyon, No. 238, Studio City, CA 91604, or by using the “Contact” form at asklizwest­on.com. Distribute­d by No More Red Inc.

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? FINANCIAL CONSULTANT Casey Mervine at Charles Schwab in Torrance meets with a client to discuss his retirement accounts in 2011. Companies including Schwab and Vanguard offer robo-advising, or automated portfolio management, using computer algorithms.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times FINANCIAL CONSULTANT Casey Mervine at Charles Schwab in Torrance meets with a client to discuss his retirement accounts in 2011. Companies including Schwab and Vanguard offer robo-advising, or automated portfolio management, using computer algorithms.

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