Households that regularly get advice before they make major financial decisions do better financially than those that only rarely or never get advice, announces Francois Gadenne, executive director and chairman of the Boston-based Retirement Income Industry Association (RIIA). That’s the bottom-line finding from the recently released fourth in a series of research reports sponsored by RIIA, Financial Advisors and Boomers: Regular Use May Be Beneficial to Your Wealth.
“Our goal in doing this research was to ask the critical question: Is there any advantage to getting professional financial help?” says Larry Cohen, vice president and director of strategic business insights and co-author of the study. “Does using a financial professional improve the household’s bottom-line? Based upon this study, the answer is an unequivocal ‘yes’. Households that always or sometimes receive advice had considerably more assets in 2004 than households that did not or didn’t know if they received advice.”
When analyzing a 10-year period from 1994 to 2004, the differences in the asset holdings of the regularly advised and less regularly advised households are striking. “The inflation adjusted difference in financial assets over the 10-year period for regularly advised households was $106,000,” says Elvin Turner, managing director of Turner Consulting, LLC and co-author of the report. “In contrast, the number for households that never received advice was $29,000.”
“This study strongly endorses the role of the advisor,” observes Cohen, “although it does not prove how much advisors or investors contributed to the sterling results; either investors who choose to regularly use advisors make better financial decisions or the advisor helps investors achieve better results. What’s most likely is that it’s a little of both.”
Cohen comments on the structure of the report. “When constructing this comparison,” he says, “we did not interview the same people in 2004 as we did in 1994. Rather, we analyzed the random sample of households representing millions of people in 1994 and compared it to a similar statistically valid sample of households in 2004.”
Cohen notes that in the MacroMonitor program, his firm has gathered comprehensive financial services data on households every other year since the late 1970s. “Using data from other years, we constructed a similar analysis for the 10-year periods from 1996 to 2006 and from 1998 to 2008 and saw the same advice benefits for the 10-year periods ending in 2004, 2006 and 2008. Putting it all together,” he concludes, “we see that regular advice benefits households through different markets over a 14-year slice of modern history.”