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By: Donald Ray Haas As an industry, we have diligently developed methods to understand our clients risk tolerance; yet, we have misapplied this information. This can be serious and requires immediate correction. Before we fix this problem, lets explore risk tolerance and its application. Lets call risk tolerance financial attitude, or how a person feels about any particular financial undertaking. There are two key elements or issues surrounding a persons financial attitude: To what degree does the person understand what is involved, and how is he or she reacting to that understanding? There are many types of risk, as the list below reveals. Nonetheless, we are not addressing any of these risks in this months column. Instead, we will explore how clients react to each of these risks, which is real, or how people think they will react, which is perceived. Consider this analogy: A five-year-old enters his mothers closet to explore its contents. A gust of wind blows the closet door shut. One moment, there is plenty of light to explore non-threatening clothes. The next moment, its totally dark and scary. The closets contents did not change. The only thing that changed was the lighting, which provided the child with a sense of perceived safety. The situation could be remedied by merely turning on the closet light. Helping
clients Let us divide this planning process into manageable steps: First, discover your clients risk tolerance level. Our industry has developed many questionnaires to help you evaluate this status. Next month, I will share the questionnaire I have been using for over 25 years. It is a tool that provides an extremely high correlation with reality. Second, properly apply this information when recommending financial products and services. This is where our industry has missed the boat. Actually, it is more disastrous than just missing the boatit is more like torpedoing the value of the evaluation. Insurance companies, investment product providers and even our educational institutions have promulgated the use of a tolerance scale to recommend only products that match the risk level a client scores in the evaluation. If you follow this scale, you are a victim of improper training. Why? Because the tolerance level a client scores tells you how the client perceives his or her comfort level to be. It also indicates your clients knowledge level of the proposed financial strategy. It does not indicate, however, what products and services are needed to achieve your clients goals. While it wont tell you to recommend one product or the other, it does tell you to what extent you will need to provide information, and sometimes, how long it will take the client to get to the point that he or she can tolerate the needed medicine. My partner, Mark Davis, explains it as follows: When a medical doctor diagnoses a patients condition, the doctor prescribes the proper remedy. If a patient states that he does not like the taste of a certain medicine, the doctor doesnt obligingly say: In that case, I will only give you half a dose. That would be less offensive. But, that is malpractice. Instead, the doctor might say: Yes, the taste is strong, but there is no better cure. If you take a mint following each dose, it might be more tolerable. If I reduce the dosage, you may not recover. Are you committing malpractice by recommending products or services that do not allow your clients to meet their financial goals or are you providing only halfway measures? If your client has a low risk tolerance score, its not necessarily permanent. It should tell you that time is needed to educate this client about how it works. Turn on the light, or prescribe the right medicine. Easier-to-swallow alternatives probably will not do the job. If your client is a very aggressive risk taker, the same thing applies. Take the time to educate him. Describe how excessive risk taking is not worth the small potential extra reward. Next month, look for my Financial Attitude Questionnaire. We will address how to use it, what it means and how to properly apply the information. Donald Ray Haas, CLU, ChFC, CFP, MSFS, of Southfield, Mich., has been an insurance agent and financial consultant for 45 years. He can be reached at 248-213-0101 or at Donaldhaas@aol.com. Types of Risk
Donald Haass series: Retirement Planning Determining Your Clients Risk Tolerance (January 2002) Risky Business (February 2002) Risk Assessment Questionnaire PDF Understanding the Risk Tolerance Questionnaire (March 2002) Risk Tolerance Revisited (April 2002) |