4 Things Your Stock Broker Dosn't Want You to Know
1. Your stock broker has an inventory that his boss wants him to unload.
Stock broker firms often buy securities in bulk and then turn around and sell the stock out of their own inventory. However, unlike a retail store, your stock broker won’t have a sale to move the product off the shelf. Rather, the stock broker firm will turn up the pressure on its sales force to increase sales of that investment.
Don't be a bag holder: Stockbrokers may also trade securities out of their own accounts, so in addition to the commission incentive, there could be a profit incentive, as your stock broker sells you, taking profit on the stock his firm bought at much lower prices.
Hidden fees and commissions: For more complicated and longer-term investments, like limited partnerships, the stock broker firm may collect management fees. More commonly, bigger stock broker firms may pay stock brokers more for selling the firm's proprietary products. Also, for some investments the stock broker gets a residual payment in addition to the commission, which means he gets a percentage of the assets as long as you continue to own the investment. But you may never know these things.
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2. A stock broker's main qualification is that he can sell.
You may also be unaware of other incentives that increase conflicts. When a stock broker transfers to a new firm, he may be offered, in addition to a signing bonus, an accelerated payout—a higher commission for the first month or year.
You can imagine the incentive that stock broker has to "push product" before his commission drops to a lower percentage. Similarly, at the end of the year, many firms pay their stock brokers based upon the percentage of commissions they generated on a sliding scale.
The more commissions over a year the stockbroker generates, the higher his percentage goes and the more money he is paid at the end of the year. There’s a natural conflict to try to generate more commissions at the end of the year based on this higher payout.
One of the worst atrocities is the sales contest. Brokerage firms will load stock brokers with gifts, trips or just extra money for selling over a certain amount of a particular investment during a given time period. Rarely, if ever, are you the client made aware of this. Even the most naive investor would think twice about buying an investment if she was told that one of the reasons the investment is being suggested to her is because some stock broker can win a trip to Hawaii.
3. Your stock broker puts you at way too much risk.
Stock brokers are famous for telling you to buy and hold. But testing the record of this strategy is as easy as looking at a simple NASDAQ chart for the past 10 years. If you had bought in 1997 you would be sitting on a loss by 2002.
If you were unlucky enough to have bought in 2000, and many were because stock brokers had a big incentive then to unload their inventories, you would still be suffering a loss 7 long years later.
A simple CD would have outperformed this record and would have at least kept up with inflation |