Since we have some financial advisors on this forum, I'd like to ask why there seems to be this obsession with Limited Partnerships among some financial advisors. This puzzles me to no end.
I'll frequently see a situation where someone inherits money, goes to a finaancial advisor, and of course the reports start coming in each year showing alls sorts of trading activity. Much of it is with proprietary funds or other stuff which carries pretty high transaction costs. Not to defend or criticize the activity - I understand the advisor has to make money somehow.
But then stuck in the middle of the paperwork blizzard will be one or two K-1's with 6 pages explaining their limited partnership investments. A client with $100,000 or so in invested funds will often have two or three of these limited partnerships with $5,000 invested in each one. Frankly, they're more trouble then they're worth, they consistently lose money, and they're just a drain on everybody's time & resources. Plus you have to do that UBTI dance just to be sure there isn't a 990 filing requirement by somebody.
What's the strategy here? Do financial advisors recommend them in the misguided belief that this is a logical part of a "diversification" strategy? I thought limted parterships were discredited about 15-20 years ago to the point that nobody would promote them, yet they keep popping up with pretty much the same results as back then. Is there some grand plan that I'm missing, or is it just the simple fact that limited partnerships pay more commission? Or do my clients just have incredibly bad judgement in choosing financial advisors? Or do they have even worse luck in choosing a tax preparer who can't comprehend the big picture?
I plan to ask one or two f these guys this question directly when tax season is over, but I thought I'd throw it out here to see if I'm just way off base.
I'll frequently see a situation where someone inherits money, goes to a finaancial advisor, and of course the reports start coming in each year showing alls sorts of trading activity. Much of it is with proprietary funds or other stuff which carries pretty high transaction costs. Not to defend or criticize the activity - I understand the advisor has to make money somehow.
But then stuck in the middle of the paperwork blizzard will be one or two K-1's with 6 pages explaining their limited partnership investments. A client with $100,000 or so in invested funds will often have two or three of these limited partnerships with $5,000 invested in each one. Frankly, they're more trouble then they're worth, they consistently lose money, and they're just a drain on everybody's time & resources. Plus you have to do that UBTI dance just to be sure there isn't a 990 filing requirement by somebody.
What's the strategy here? Do financial advisors recommend them in the misguided belief that this is a logical part of a "diversification" strategy? I thought limted parterships were discredited about 15-20 years ago to the point that nobody would promote them, yet they keep popping up with pretty much the same results as back then. Is there some grand plan that I'm missing, or is it just the simple fact that limited partnerships pay more commission? Or do my clients just have incredibly bad judgement in choosing financial advisors? Or do they have even worse luck in choosing a tax preparer who can't comprehend the big picture?
I plan to ask one or two f these guys this question directly when tax season is over, but I thought I'd throw it out here to see if I'm just way off base.
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