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It’s time to take control of your money!

Have you bought into Wall Street’s marketing propaganda? Is your financial planner’s bias limiting your wealth? Are you paying fees on money that doesn’t even belong to you?

Market volatility isn’t going away. Higher tax rates are coming no matter what politicians say. It’s time to break away from the status quo of outdated financial advice. Build real wealth and protect your family’s assets against future tax hikes. Don’t be blinded by shiny Wall Street promises! Learn financial tips the big firms don’t want you to know from an expert with over 25 years of insider experience.

Here are just a few of the ways your financial advisor’s bias may be limiting your wealth:

The over promotion of tax-deferred accounts

These provide minimum advantages. Financial firms deceptively focus on and promote the larger balances that these accounts appear to have. After all taxes are considered, these accounts provide only a minimal advantage in that the dividend and interest is allowed to compound without taxation until withdraw. These accounts may grow larger more quickly, but much of that growth belongs to various taxing authorities at future unknown tax rates. And you pay management fees on the government’s share of these accounts.

The Intentional misrepresentation of future tax rates 

Misinformation about future tax rates deceptively persuades investors to focus on tax deferred accounts that are more profitable for the big financial firms. Taxes are not likely to be lower when you retire but instead almost certain to be much higher.

The over promotion of retirement planning 

Focusing only on retirement planning ignores the higher need for liquidity and wealth building. Retirement is not and should not be the primary investment goal. Flexibility and liquidity should be of equally important. High management fees for longer periods can be collected if money remains in retirement targeted accounts. And so firms push the retirement planning agenda for their own benefit.

Fee-based accounts are misrepresented

…as somehow better than commission accounts when in fact an investor may pay much more in fees that they would have in a commissions account. To be clear, I am not saying that fees are bad. At times fees are absolutely the best method to pay for investment advice. Fees or commission may be appropriate depending on the situation.

Shamefully designed and sold annuities trick investors

Annuities buyers often believe they are getting a significant interest rate of return for a lifetime income guarantee, when in many cases they are only getting a slow return of their own investments. Many annuity investors are misled into falsely believing that a fixed rate withdrawal is an interest rate they are receiving. In addition, deceptively named income or withdrawal account growth is designed to trick the investor into believing a guaranteed growth is occurring. In reality, these accounts cannot be withdrawn, are not real money, and are just accounting entry indications that an annuitant is closer to death, and so the insurance company can afford to make higher annual withdrawal from their account. However, if properly understood and focused on the cash value growth, an annuity can be a good investment.

Financial firms ignore other investments 

Investments that provide better returns and tax advantages than the typically recommended stocks, bonds, ETFs and mutual fund portfolios are often ignored. This is because of reduced access due to pay-to-play issues and the lower fees and commission other investments may provide the firms.

529 college plans can actually increase the cost of college 

Learn how 529 plans may actually increase the cost of college while providing profits to the financial firms. This is done in order to increase financial firms’ profitability at the expense of their clients.

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