| Madoff Scandal: What Does This Fraudulent Ripoff Mean For You? |
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Consider that: Fairfield Greenwich Group reported Friday that its clients’ investment in Madoff’s firm amounts to $7.5 billion. For a summary of financial institutions, individual investors and charitable organizations affected, see these reports: Who's affected by Madoff Ponzi Scheme?
This means that need to do your homework and watch out for red flags that signal danger.
Investment advisors were told that Madoff’s strategy was secret. I say B.S.! Though it makes sense for hedge funds to be wary of revealing their strategies to the general public, reputable advisors and funds not only permit but encourage due diligence and transparency. Too much secrecy is suspect. Stay away unless you’ve been given full disclosure about your money and what an advisor is doing with it. It’s simply stupid to invest in a “black box” of any kind. I can’t say this strongly enough. Don’t invest in anything you don’t understand. Besides, Madoff wasn’t a hedge fund manager. Rather, he was an investment manager advising investors inside his own securities firm. Now, let’s turn our attention to the holdings of his securities firm, Madoff Securities. According to Madoff Securities’ S.E.C. filings, the holdings were too small to support $50 billion in assets. It was reported in the New York Times on Saturday that Madoff’s proponents actually said that Madoff sold all of his shares at the end of each quarter. Come on people. Don’t buy that B.S. Lastly, I was shocked at the apparent disregard for basic risk management. It’s critical that investors don’t invest more than 5% of their assets in any one investment. The only exception I can think of is backed by academic research and actual positive market returns over a long time horizon. This exception is investing in “whole markets” through index-based mutual funds and ETFs. Join me and other truly trustworthy investing advocates (hint: we don’t have the agenda of wanting to manage your money) like John Bogle and William Bernstein. Learn about the principles of investing that have been proven to work. And leave the scam artists and too good to be true investments to others. |
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