Protect Yourself: Ask First!
Many of us need legal, financial, retirement, accounting,
estate, long-term care or similar planning services. We
seek help from planning advisors possessing the necessary
training. Many planning advisors are well-qualified and
capable, and make fair disclosure of pertinent information
to their clients. Unfortunately, unqualified or dishonest
individuals masquerade as expert planning advisors. Many
of them provide sub-standard services or have hidden financial
motives in providing their "planning services."
The California Attorney General recently cracked down on
one company that was giving estate planning advice, and
selling living trusts to Older Adults in California. According
to the Attorney Generals Office, the company would
find out all about an Older Adults finances and investments
as part of the living trust planning process. Then the Older
Adult would be approached to buy annuities, after selling
or exchanging their existing investments. Annuities can
generate significant up-front commissions for the seller,
and over $200,000,000 of annuities were sold this way.
Other groups have seen the financial success of the trust-annuity
sales gimmick, and adopted it as their model. Some are using
a slightly different approach they offer advice on
long-term care planning, including Medi-Cal. Their real
motivation, however, is still to sell annuities. They only
give part of the picture, and stress that some annuities
dont count as assets under Medi-Cals eligibility
rules. Theyre pushing lots of unsuitable annuities
this way, and getting paid large commissions.
This growing problem points out the need to know, in
advance,
 | if
the new advisor has legitimate professional credentials,
and |
 | how
the new advisor gets paid. |
H.E.L.P. has developed the Ask First! form
as a tool to help you. See the end of this page for
a link to the Ask First! form. Using
the form, you ask the advisor to disclose in writing his
or her credentials and ways of being paid. Keep a copy of
the form handy. Use Ask First!
at the beginning, before you start a relationship
with a new advisor.
 | If
the person is reluctant to complete the form, take this
as a warning. |
 | Review
the person's answers, and look for missing or inconsistent
information. |
 | Check
out the person's licenses and other credentials, and
past complaints and sanctions. |
 | If
the person doesn't answer all the questions, or if the
answers make you uncomfortable, or if the answers do
not "check out," do not do business with the
person. Look for another advisor! |
At the same time you use Ask First! be sure
to ask for and check the advisors references.
Ask First!
is a PDF form that can be downloaded free, and printed out
for your use. If you do not have a PDF reader
-- you can obtain one for free from Adobe.
You may also order Ask First! through the mail.
Please visit our publications
order page for this and other free H.E.L.P.
publications.
Remember: Ask First!
Already Purchased an Unsuitable Annuity? Go to our
new Who Can Help section for
information on who to complain to.
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