Go Back   CDN Business Directory > Main Category > Financial Planning

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #5  
Old 08-29-2008, 08:11 PM
PeterL
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Professionally managed 401K?

On Aug 28, 2:04*am, 49erm...[at]gmail.com wrote:
- quote -

> The company I work for has a typical 401k plan with about 15-20 mutual
> funds to choose from, with various concentrations (growth, value,
> international, bonds, money market etc.). The selection is ok, but it
> could be better. The company that handles our 401k (Nationwide) signed
> up with Wilshire Associates, and are now providing what they call a
> "pro" account. Getting talent like that at Wilshire to manage your
> money usually takes a lot of money (like large pension plans). They
> would be handling my asset allocation, rebalancing my account, etc.
> They would have access to more funds then I currently have. Cost?
> 1.35%. Is it worth it?
> I'm trying to get as much feedback before I make up my mind.



There are lots of free allocation tools on the web.

------ Misc.invest.financial-plan is a moderated newsgroup where Moderators strive
to keep the conversations on-topic for financial planning. Other posting
guidelines include a request for brevity and another for trimming posts to
which we respond. For all of the other tips and suggestions, see "FROM THE
MODERATORS: Posting to misc.invest.financial-plan", a weekly post now on the
Newsgroup.

  #4  
Old 08-28-2008, 08:54 PM
BreadWithSpam@fractious.net
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Professionally managed 401K?

49ermike[at]gmail.com writes:

- quote -

> They would have access to more funds then I currently have. Cost?
> 1.35%. Is it worth it?


Is that 1.35% on TOP of the mutual fund management fees
for the funds they'd use for your portfolio?

That's pretty expensive. Maybe cheap for a very small
managed account, but overall very expensive.

What funds (and at what expenses) do you have available
to you if you don't go with these guys?

--
Plain Bread alone for e-mail, thanks. The rest gets trashed.
No HTML in E-Mail! -- http://www.expita.com/nomime.html
Are you posting responses that are easy for others to follow?
http://www.greenend.org.uk/rjk/2000/06/14/quoting

------ Misc.invest.financial-plan is a moderated newsgroup where Moderators strive
to keep the conversations on-topic for financial planning. Other posting
guidelines include a request for brevity and another for trimming posts to
which we respond. For all of the other tips and suggestions, see "FROM THE
MODERATORS: Posting to misc.invest.financial-plan", a weekly post now on the
Newsgroup.

  #3  
Old 08-28-2008, 04:26 PM
joeDOTweinsteinATgmailDOTcom
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Professionally managed 401K?

The vast majority of professional stock/fund pickers do worse than the
market over the long term, and paying them an extra 1.35% is an
extra insult. In my opinion, find one broad index fund if you have
one,
such as that covers the S&P500 or wilshire 5000, and put all your
stock allocation in it, and be happy. Put whatever portion you want
in bonds, in a broad bond index if possible. How old are you? If
young,
most if not all should be in stocks.

------ Misc.invest.financial-plan is a moderated newsgroup where Moderators strive
to keep the conversations on-topic for financial planning. Other posting
guidelines include a request for brevity and another for trimming posts to
which we respond. For all of the other tips and suggestions, see "FROM THE
MODERATORS: Posting to misc.invest.financial-plan", a weekly post now on the
Newsgroup.

  #2  
Old 08-28-2008, 04:07 PM
Default User
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Professionally managed 401K?

49ermike[at]gmail.com wrote:

- quote -

> The company I work for has a typical 401k plan with about 15-20 mutual
> funds to choose from, with various concentrations (growth, value,
> international, bonds, money market etc.). The selection is ok, but it
> could be better. The company that handles our 401k (Nationwide) signed
> up with Wilshire Associates, and are now providing what they call a
> "pro" account. Getting talent like that at Wilshire to manage your
> money usually takes a lot of money (like large pension plans). They
> would be handling my asset allocation, rebalancing my account, etc.
> They would have access to more funds then I currently have. Cost?
> 1.35%. Is it worth it?


There is a lot of information that is needed before any useful input
can be given. Early thoughts:

1. That's a pretty high fee for what really isn't much work beyond the
initial asset plan. Most plans make rebalancing easy, and with slicing
of contributions rebalancing isn't even necessary much of the time.
With a taxable account, a manager can stay on top of tax-loss
harvesting, but that's not applicable here. What is this person going
to do to earn that kind of fee?

2. What kind of plan is the manager going to come up with? An
index-based approach emphasizing low fees, or trying to identify hot
fund managers? This talk of "expertise" sounds somewhat ominous. What
allocation plan do you have now, and how did you come up with it?

3. How bad are your current selections, and how great are the
additional funds? Some fund names/tickers or information would be
useful.

4. Do you have significant investments outside of the 401(k)?
Portfolios should normally be considered as a whole. Part of portfolio
management is getting the right assets in tax-advantaged versus taxable
accounts. Will this manager take that into account when creating the
allocation?




Brian

------ Misc.invest.financial-plan is a moderated newsgroup where Moderators strive
to keep the conversations on-topic for financial planning. Other posting
guidelines include a request for brevity and another for trimming posts to
which we respond. For all of the other tips and suggestions, see "FROM THE
MODERATORS: Posting to misc.invest.financial-plan", a weekly post now on the
Newsgroup.

  #1  
Old 08-28-2008, 03:53 PM
Elle
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Professionally managed 401K?

<49ermike[at]gmail.com> wrote
- quote -

> The company I work for has a typical 401k plan with about
> 15-20 mutual
> funds to choose from, with various concentrations (growth,
> value,
> international, bonds, money market etc.). The selection is
> ok, but it
> could be better. The company that handles our 401k
> (Nationwide) signed
> up with Wilshire Associates, and are now providing what
> they call a
> "pro" account. Getting talent like that at Wilshire to
> manage your
> money usually takes a lot of money (like large pension
> plans). They
> would be handling my asset allocation, rebalancing my
> account, etc.
> They would have access to more funds then I currently
> have. Cost?
> 1.35%. Is it worth it?


What other fund in particular would you like? Fifteen to 20
funds with the basic areas covered sounds plenty fine. If
there is some other fund you really want, is it possible to
invest in it via a Traditional or Roth IRA, or even taxable
account?

1.35% is steep and reduces your returns meaningful over ten
years. I would experiment with all the free online asset
allocators linked at
http://ellessite.googlepages.com/assetallocation . Note the
differences. Ask yourself, "Is this really such an exact
science?" If after reading more you think not, then do your
own asset allocation and rebalancing, once a year.

------ Misc.invest.financial-plan is a moderated newsgroup where Moderators strive
to keep the conversations on-topic for financial planning. Other posting
guidelines include a request for brevity and another for trimming posts to
which we respond. For all of the other tips and suggestions, see "FROM THE
MODERATORS: Posting to misc.invest.financial-plan", a weekly post now on the
Newsgroup.

 
Old 08-28-2008, 03:51 PM
joetaxpayer
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Professionally managed 401K?



49ermike[at]gmail.com wrote:

- quote -

> The company I work for has a typical 401k plan with about 15-20 mutual
> funds to choose from, with various concentrations (growth, value,
> international, bonds, money market etc.). The selection is ok, but it
> could be better. The company that handles our 401k (Nationwide) signed
> up with Wilshire Associates, and are now providing what they call a
> "pro" account. Getting talent like that at Wilshire to manage your
> money usually takes a lot of money (like large pension plans). They
> would be handling my asset allocation, rebalancing my account, etc.
> They would have access to more funds then I currently have. Cost?
> 1.35%. Is it worth it?
> I'm trying to get as much feedback before I make up my mind.


I trust the funds have their own expense, perhaps 1%?

The extra fee isn't likely to enhance your return beyond the expense of
the fee. Does your company match any of your deposits? What are the fees
of these funds? Are some lower than others? For my 401(k), the S&P index
is crazy low, .05%. The foreign funds, not so good. So in my allocation,
the S&P goes into the 401(k) and other sectors go into the IRA accounts.

Joe

www.blog.joetaxpayer.com

------ Misc.invest.financial-plan is a moderated newsgroup where Moderators strive
to keep the conversations on-topic for financial planning. Other posting
guidelines include a request for brevity and another for trimming posts to
which we respond. For all of the other tips and suggestions, see "FROM THE
MODERATORS: Posting to misc.invest.financial-plan", a weekly post now on the
Newsgroup.

  #-1  
Old 08-28-2008, 09:04 AM
49ermike@gmail.com
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Professionally managed 401K?

The company I work for has a typical 401k plan with about 15-20 mutual
funds to choose from, with various concentrations (growth, value,
international, bonds, money market etc.). The selection is ok, but it
could be better. The company that handles our 401k (Nationwide) signed
up with Wilshire Associates, and are now providing what they call a
"pro" account. Getting talent like that at Wilshire to manage your
money usually takes a lot of money (like large pension plans). They
would be handling my asset allocation, rebalancing my account, etc.
They would have access to more funds then I currently have. Cost?
1.35%. Is it worth it?

I'm trying to get as much feedback before I make up my mind.

------ Misc.invest.financial-plan is a moderated newsgroup where Moderators strive
to keep the conversations on-topic for financial planning. Other posting
guidelines include a request for brevity and another for trimming posts to
which we respond. For all of the other tips and suggestions, see "FROM THE
MODERATORS: Posting to misc.invest.financial-plan", a weekly post now on the
Newsgroup.

 

Tags
401k, managed, professionally
Similar Threads
Thread Forum Replies Last Post
Annuity vs Managed Payout
Chip: Have about $400K in 401k, diversified, but just sitting there since retirement 2 yrs ago. A broker/advisor is pushing me toward AVIVA "IncomePlus"...
Financial Planning 7 06-11-2008 09:11 AM
California LLC: any tax consequences from changing from member-managed to manager-managed LLC?
streetfilm@charter.net: My dad and I have an LLC in California. We are bringing in an investor and want to convert our LLC to a Manager-managed LLC so I may be the sole...
Taxes 6 06-29-2005 03:52 PM
tracking company managed 401k?
wiredup: I am pretty MS Money versed user and have a question I can't seem to find the answer to--might be a little complicated Using: MS Money 2005...
Microsoft Money 3 10-25-2004 12:17 PM



Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off

All times are GMT. The time now is 02:06 PM.