(Opening lines from a lecture by
Peter Lynch.. circa 2000 or so... Do not have the full talk)
As a whole, the financial
services industry has become morally bankrupt and spiritually depleted. We have
created a ‘cottage industry’ that feeds millions who make a living within, and
on the fringe of financial markets. Nowhere is the illusion more alive than in
the allure of the terminology, “financial
planning”. Here, millions of investors have assumed that a ‘scientific
evaluation’ has occurred.
Before I share why the ‘scientific evaluation’ assumption is
inaccurate, let me tell you how I believe the term ‘financial planning’
evolved. In the late 1980s, the financial services industry was deregulated. Up
until that time, brokers sold stocks & bonds, insurance salesmen sold life
and auto insurance, and banks made credit available. The sales method, employed
at the time, was basically universal ‘give the client a headache and then sell
him an aspirin’ (identify what was wrong and just ‘happen’ to have the solution
in your briefcase).
When deregulation went in to
effect, the financial services industry players had to appear to the investing
public as all encompassing and, thus, the term ‘financial planning’ was born.
It would be a universal sign that your bank teller can now also be your broker
and your insurance agent.
One-stop financial planning
became the norm. So what’s wrong with this picture?
There is a story that went around
about three accountants that were applying for a job. Each was asked only one
question: ‘How much is two plus two?’. The first two simply said ‘four’. The third
got the job. Why? His answer was ‘What do you want it to be?’. Financial planning
is a flawed process. This ‘scientific process’ works in essentially the same
fashion as the question above. It is simply guesswork utilizing several
significant mathematical assumptions such as interest rates, inflation rates
and tax rates. These economic factors are unimportant to some since they always
‘buy low and sell high’. However, I hope that you would agree that they are
assumptions that will impact the future. Therefore, since we realise that no
one can accurately predict the future, it stands to reason that one or more of
these assumptions must be incorrect in the plan, thereby leading to either the
plan being reconfigured or a change in financial planners, or the worst choice,
‘doing it yourself’. Also the plan begins with the question ‘how much do you
need at retirement?’. Therefore, the ‘scientific process’ is nothing more than
smoke and mirrors, which utilizes the correct combination of assumptions to ‘reach’
that goal. The reality is that the assumptions are simply a tool to make a
sale. And, at the next ‘consultation’ with another client and on the same day,
your ‘Certified Financial Planner’ may use totally different interest,
inflation and tax assumptions= for the same span of time!
Unlike many of my peers, I put my
pants on one leg at a time. Perhaps this is why, I still have pants while
others have lost their shirts (pants, underwear etc) and just as much an expert
in being wrong as I am on being right. But remember that we are the sum total
of all of our mistakes and smartest person is the one who made the most
mistakes and learned from those mistakes. With that said... I will ----
All I ask is an open mind, which
is difficult considering that the financial services industry, and supporting
media outlets, spends billions on creating an illusion that even Houdini would
appreciate.
1 comment:
Real Contra View....
But for young generation, they lack Financial Literacy ( almost 60%). They dont even know the Value of money. For them, it is difficult to educate and advise on savngs. Hence people is taking advantage of mis selling. Peter Lynch really good visionary....Loved this article....But most of my engineering work is based on scientific assumptions.
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