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#5
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| - quote - > For a list of the DFA advisors (some lower cost), see:
Thanks Fred, but with my [relatively] small account I'm still limited> http://www.retireearlyhomepage.com/dfaadv.html to AssetBuilder. Scott C. |
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#4
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| On Wed, 1 Aug 2007 12:12:43 UTC, ScottCtr <scottctr[at]gmail.com> wrote: - quote - > Thanks for everyone's help. I now understand things a bit better.
For a list of the DFA advisors (some lower cost), see:> Maxtrix allows access to the highly reguarded DFA funds. Although > everyone seems to agree that the DFA funds are great, I'm > uncomfortable with the 2% fee. I'm now looking into AssetBuilder.com > with offers a similar plan for only a 0.5% fee. http://www.retireearlyhomepage.com/dfaadv.html --- Fred J. Tydeman Tydeman Consulting tydeman[at]tybor.com Testing, numerics, programming +1 (775) 358-9748 Vice-chair of J11 (ANSI "C") Sample C99+FPCE tests: http://www.tybor.com Savers sleep well, investors eat well, spenders work forever. |
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#3
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| On Jul 31, 2:56 pm, PeterL <po.n...[at]gmail.com> wrote: - quote - > On Jul 26, 3:46 am, scott...[at]gmail.com wrote:
Sorry the link to the document didn't make it. Here it is:> > I'm new to investing and thinking about letting Matrix Asset > > Allocation manage my retirement account. Can anyone offer any advice > > regarding this company? Here's a document I found that lays out their > > plan, including fees. > What document? http://www.wordhousewealthcoaching.c...olicyGuide.pdf. Thanks for everyone's help. I now understand things a bit better. Maxtrix allows access to the highly reguarded DFA funds. Although everyone seems to agree that the DFA funds are great, I'm uncomfortable with the 2% fee. I'm now looking into AssetBuilder.com with offers a similar plan for only a 0.5% fee. |
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#2
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| On Jul 26, 3:46 am, scott...[at]gmail.com wrote: - quote - > I'm new to investing and thinking about letting Matrix Asset > Allocation manage my retirement account. Can anyone offer any advice > regarding this company? Here's a document I found that lays out their > plan, including fees. What document? |
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#1
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| Andrew Koenig wrote: - quote - > I am going to assume that you mean the company sited at www.mymatrix.cc
I'll bite. Entered my zip code, and the first advisor listed has a web> Their home page says: > Founder and CEO, Mark Matson, is a noted speaker, author, and coach > within the financial industry. site stating; (name deleted)'s mission is to teach affluent Christians, especially women, the real TRUTHS of investing and show them how to glorify God with their wealth. The results clients experience when matching their investments to their values are increased happiness and peace of mind as they keep more of God’s wealth in His kingdom. This just doesn't seem like the type of advisor I'd rush to, if I were in the market for one. JOE |
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| <scottctr[at]gmail.com> wrote in message news:1185419276.357442.4980[at]o61g2000hsh.googlegroups.com... - quote - > I'm new to investing and thinking about letting Matrix Asset
I am going to assume that you mean the company sited at www.mymatrix.cc> Allocation manage my retirement account. Can anyone offer any advice > regarding this company? Here's a document I found that lays out their > plan, including fees. Their home page says: Founder and CEO, Mark Matson, is a noted speaker, author, and coach within the financial industry. For me, that's red flag #1, because the claim is so nonspecific as to be meaningless. If he's a noted author, what did he write that's noteworthy? Why aren't we told about it? OK, so it's off to amazon.com, where a search for Mark Matson reveals a book called "FlashPoint: Mastering the Art of Economic Abundance" by Mark E. Matson. Sounds like it's likely to be the same person. The book is number 1,544,142 in their sales ranking. In contrast, "Live it Up Without Outliving Your Money" by Seattle-area financial advisor Paul Merriman is #43,281. That word "coach" is a red flag, too. If I'm paying someone for advice, I want an expert, not a coach. Maybe that's just me. Anyway, back to the website to learn more. The home page has three sections: "About My.Matrix," "Guest of My.Matrix," "My.Matrix Login." That third one is for people who are already clients, so we can forget it. I click "About My.Matrix" and get taken to a page that says "Find an Advisor." I can enter a zip code and a distance, and get a list of names and addresses. No other information--in particular, nothing about their qualifications. I click "Guest of My.Matrix" and find that I can proceed no further until I enter an "Advisor number" -- the code of the person who has referred me to the website. So at this point I'm out of options. The only way to learn more about the company appears to be to contact one of the people on their list, enter that person's number into the website, and then whatever. Oh wait, there's more at the top of the guest page. I can click on "Matrix," then "Company Purpose," and learn the following: Grounded in the conviction that Free Markets Work, Matrix provides superior money management services through the integration of philosophy, discipline and technology. Matrix Asset Allocation founded by Mark E. Matson in 1991, was established to serve the needs of investors nationwide by providing quality investment services delivered through experienced financial professions. Matrix, a division of Abundance Technologies, Inc., is firmly grounded in the conviction that Free Markets Work. Matrix utilizes Free Market Investing(TM) strategies based on Nobel Price-winning economic theories. This disciplined papproach to life-long investing provides both the individual investor and the financial professional with the academic foundation upon which to achieve peace of mind regarding investments. We manage in excess of $1.8 billion for investors across the country. So the only actual content on this page is that they manage more than $1.8 billion. OK, so I go to "My Library" and click "Articles" and then "Meet the Academics." The first thing I see is a bunch of biographies of famous economists. None of these people actually work for Matrix, so I'm not sure why they're so prominently featured, but there they are. The other page there is "The Financial Professional Relationship." I'm not going to quote it all here, but the last sentence is key: Advisors who utlize The Matrix Free Market Investing process have committed to at least six months of training in the use and understanding of this process. What odd language! Does "have committed to at least six months of training" mean that the advisors have signed up for a six-month course but haven't necessarily completed it? Is that six months of full-time study? With whom? Where? Under what standards? All in all, this website is more interesting for what it doesn't say than for what it says. Unless I'm in the wrong place, or unless someone can point out something important to me that I've missed, I'd be inclined to avoid this outfit. |
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#-1
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| I'm new to investing and thinking about letting Matrix Asset Allocation manage my retirement account. Can anyone offer any advice regarding this company? Here's a document I found that lays out their plan, including fees. |
| Tags |
| allocation, asset, matrix |
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