The Downside of Excessive Caution

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Here’s a quote attributed to Tacitus, a senator and historian of the Roman Empire: “The desire for safety stands against every great and noble enterprise.”

As advisors, you counsel your clients about risk. But based on my experience, you don’t take enough risk. I agree with Tacitus. Your excessive caution is imperiling your business.

Mark Zuckerberg once told a budding group of entrepreneurs that, “The biggest risk is not taking any risk. In a world that's changing really quickly, the only strategy that is guaranteed to fail is not taking risks.”

Many of you are entrepreneurs. Are you taking enough risk?

Your business is changing

Ric Edelman, the chairman and CEO of Edelman Financial Services, observed at a conference sponsored by Inside ETFs over a year ago that robo-advisors would put most advisors out of business. Many disagree, but everyone believes the industry is undergoing rapid change.

The reaction of many advisors to this potential disruption has been excessive caution. Instead of investing in technology to be competitive, these advisors trivialized the threat. Even now, when I discuss the subject of whether a fee based on AUM is competitive, some advisors are in denial. They believe the disruption, if any, will take place slowly, over a long period of time.

While no one knows what the future will hold, it is more likely that technology will continue to accelerate at a very rapid pace, permitting investors to access not just low-cost portfolios online, but also to engage in sophisticated financial planning, tax planning and estate planning.

Huge fund families like Fidelity, Schwab and Vanguard are already competing for retail business at fees significantly lower than those charged by independent advisors. They will likely lead the charge towards more sophisticated offerings. They already have the technology in place, and their resources dwarf those of the largest independent advisors.