Guarding Your Wealth

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 No Such Thing as a Free Lunch

 

  Most of the seniors that contact me about investments they regret admit they’ve purchased them as a result of a free ‘educational’ lunch or dinner seminar. They go expecting to have a nice meal with other seniors ‘on the house’, and end up losing their shirt in some kind of investment scheme.

The problem has become so rampant that the Senate Special Committee on Aging recently held a hearing on the subject, as well as advisors that use dubious designations such as "senior financial investment specialists" to gain seniors’ trust.

An Associated Press article entitled ‘Senate Panel Eyes 'Free-lunch' Senior Scams’ quoted Sen. Herb Kohl, the panel’s chairman as saying, “Seniors should be able to trust the people who invest their money.” Indeed, they should.

The article makes a disturbing point: “People 60 and older make up 15 percent of the country's population but account for an estimated 30 percent of fraud victims. With baby boomers swelling the ranks of retirees, regulators expect a rise in financial scammers preying on them.”

Seniors need to realize that these “free” seminars are not as free as they seem. The entire purpose of these marketing endeavors is to get you to buy something. That may seem obvious, but how many seniors that attend these freebies actually plan in advance to liquidate their life savings and put it all into an investment they don’t really understand? And yet, multitudes of seniors do this every year.

Don’t get me wrong. Not every financial seminar out there is a scam. But there are a number of seminars that go way over the line, using high pressure tactics, erroneous information and outright deception to get a hold of your money.

Here’s the thing to remember about most seminars. The cost to do a typical seminar for
100 attendees can easily reach $5000. That price tag includes buying the mailing list, buying the sales pitch (very few write their own), the food, renting the venue, etc. Now an advisor isn’t going to spend $5000 if they aren’t fairly certain of making that much back and more.

That’s why most seminars promote high-commission products with long surrender periods. Otherwise, it wouldn’t be financially feasible to use them. The advisor only needs a few sales to make it all worth while.

Those who write the sales pitches for these seminars are masters at pushing your hot buttons. They use the two chief motivations every investor has: fear and greed. Everyone fears losing the money they’ve worked a lifetime to achieve and no ones wants to be forced to lower their standard of living. Perhaps even more, we long for a shortcut to wealth, some inside secret others can only dream about.

The main goal of a seminar is to get you to make an appointment. The appointment isn’t presented as a sales event; it’s presented as a no-obligation way for you get more information. What can it hurt? If the presentation and the advisor are good, about 2/3’s of those at the seminar will set an appointment. The advisor knows that there should be a sale with at least 1 out of every 3 people he/she meets with. For some, the ‘close ratio’ is much higher than that. It’s a numbers game.

So should you attend these free seminars? In essence, they are like those time-share deals where you get two free nights if you’re willing to sit through the sales pitch. It’s very easy for people to resist the time-share sales pitch. It’s much harder to resist an investment-product pitch that’s presented as the best thing since sliced bread.

If you do attend, I recommend that you not divulge any financial information. Don’t set an appointment at the seminar. Waiting several days or weeks will give you a better perspective. You’ll likely decide not to make one at all.

Do research…lots of it. Don’t take their word for it. Check it out independently. The advisor is biased and the information he/she gives you will be, too. Find sources that tell you what’s wrong with the investment. You must have all the information so you can make an informed decision. Talk to several other advisors—all with different approaches.

Is a free $20 dinner worth the risk of becoming the next fraud statistic?

Nationally-syndicated financial columnist and Certified Financial Planner® Jeffrey Voudrie provides personal, in-depth money management services and advice to select private clients throughout the USA. He’ll answer your financial question – FREE at www.guardingyourwealth.com.
 
 


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