Confused About Investing? Fee-Only Financial Planners Can Offer Clarity

Breakwater Team • October 21, 2024

For many aspiring investors, the question of where to begin looms large. From stocks to bonds, mutual funds, ETFs, or the burgeoning field of alternatives, it’s no surprise that many people feel overwhelmed or paralyzed by the options.   



The good news is that if you have $500,000 or more of investable assets, you are to hire a professional to guide you down the proper path, depending on your objectives. All investments offer some potential for returns, some greater than others, and there are varying risk factors or possible tax implications to be aware of. Even if you consider yourself financially savvy, having a trusted financial partner can pay big dividends.   


This is where a fee-only financial advisor can step in. By offering a sense of greater confidence and bringing more focus to your plan, they should increase the probability of success. Managing your wealth is more than watching investments grow. It’s about aligning various financial strategies with your current circumstances and future goals, ensuring that your wealth serves a broader purpose rather than just numbers on a screen or statement. 


Your goals may vary or sometimes seem to be competing—whether that’s funding your retirement, supporting causes you care about, or building your family’s financial future through buying a home or setting aside money for a loved one’s education. The challenge is losing sight of the bigger picture, which is easy without a structured financial plan. Breakwater Capital offers holistic wealth management services for successful individuals and their families. 

Our experienced team of CFPs® provides personalized strategies to help you build, preserve, and distribute your wealth. Focusing on your unique goals, we guide you through the complexities of financial decisions, ensuring thoughtful and knowledgeable support at every step. In this blog, we’ll explore how fiduciary, fee-only financial planning can meaningfully impact your wealth management experience.

Understanding How Financial Planners and Advisors Are Compensated

Before going further, we want to address a topic many couples don’t take the time to understand and many fail to address when interviewing prospective advisors: How is your financial planner or advisor being compensated for his or her knowledge, advice, and services? 

Also, as the critical mass of your wealth increases, and more often than not, the associated costs rise, too, the complexities of managing your money become more apparent. 


This means transparent compensation arrangements are critically important for protecting and growing your assets. When choosing a fee-only financial planner, you want to be assured of one thing: the recommendations you receive are in your best interest and free from outside pressures and potential conflicts. Unlike fee-based or commission-based advisors, a fee-only planner is paid only by you, which enables this professional to provide comprehensive advice while mitigating conflicts of interest. 


The following is a breakdown of the primary compensation models for financial advisors: 

  • Fee-Only Financial Planners: These advisors charge either a flat fee or a percentage of assets under management (AUM). They do not receive commissions for selling financial products (investment or insurance), thereby ensuring that the advice you receive is always based on what is best for you and your family.
  • Fee-Based Financial Planners: These advisors can charge fees and also be compensated with commissions from third parties (mutual funds, annuities). While they may offer solid financial advice, this opens the door for potential conflicts of interest.
  • Commission-Only Advisors: These professionals earn income through commissions from selling insurance products, mutual funds, or other investments. While this model may work for investors with small asset amounts, the advice they provide may be influenced by the financial benefits they stand to gain from the products they sell. 

Fiduciary Responsibility: Why It Matters As Your Wealth Grows

When working with a financial advisor, one of the most important considerations is whether their licensing or registration makes them a financial fiduciary at all times. At many of the large investment firms, you may hear the phrase “dually registered,” which means the individual you are speaking with may act as either a broker or an adviser. You can appreciate when that inherent conflict of being able to act as either can impair decision-making, especially when it comes to things like compensation.   



A fiduciary is legally bound to put your financial interests first, ensuring that their advice aligns with your current requirements and future goals. It is important to note that not all financial advisors are fiduciaries, so it’s crucial to ask this question when selecting someone to help manage your wealth. This empowers you to make informed decisions about your financial future. This question is important enough that you may want a written response. When your selection decision impacts your future financial security, a documented response is more reliable than a verbal response. 

Why is fiduciary responsibility so crucial as your wealth increases?

  • As your wealth grows, the stakes increase; you often have more to lose and less time to accumulate/recover. A fiduciary advisor provides recommendations that are not influenced by commissions or third parties, ensuring your financial decisions are based solely on what is best for you and your family. Results matter, not transactions, for the sake of transactions.
  • As mentioned earlier, growing your wealth generally ushers in increased complexity and opportunity—whether it is related to tax strategies, estate planning, or risk management. You may now be able to invest in illiquid investments only available to accredited investors or qualified purchasers; who better to ask than your trusted advisor? A fiduciary will take a holistic view, helping you navigate financial planning challenges while staying consistent with your long-term goals. 
  • Because fiduciaries are held to the highest ethical standards in the financial planning industry, they must provide financial advice that is based solely on your best interests.


Our Insight: As a fee-only, fiduciary financial planner, Breakwater Capital Group offers transparent, comprehensive guidance that aligns with your goals. We help you navigate wealth management with confidence as your assets grow. .

Building a Customized Financial Plan for You and Your Goals

Many successful individuals and families who seek out wealth management experience in our key markets, Denver, the suburbs of Greater Boston, or Northern New Jersey, do so because they recognize the need for a professional to help decipher all that is out there when it comes to their finances. 

Rather than feel like a number, as is often the case at bulge bracket firms, they seek a real personal connection and a plan truly tailored to their unique circumstances. Getting that support during your working years, transition years, and retirement years is truly invaluable, and his continuity is bound to positively impact your quality of life during your later years. 


At Breakwater Capital Group, we’ll work with you to create lasting strategies to grow, enjoy, and then pass on that wealth to the next generation of family members or to charitable organizations that you care so deeply about. 


Our Insight: As a Denver wealth management firm, we’ve worked with many clients who want their assets to have a lasting impact on their families and their communities. At Breakwater Capital Group, we’ll work with you to create lasting strategies to pass wealth to the next generation of family members or to charitable organizations in ways that help to minimize taxes and preserve your legacy long after you and your spouse are gone.

The Emotional Aspect of Wealth: Focusing on What Matters Most

At Breakwater Capital Group, we know that financial decisions aren’t just about the numbers. Money, after all, should be a means to an end; at least, that is typically what we see in working with our clients, especially in their early years. Only later do we see those relationships. 


Successful professionals and business owners—like so many of our clients—want their wealth to be more than a figurative ATM machine. They want to protect their families, build a solid foundation for future generations, and use their resources to make a difference in the world. Delegating authority should also help alleviate the stress of managing your wealth and focus on what truly matters: your family, career, interests, and the causes you care about. 



Whether you’re in Massachusetts, Colorado, or New Jersey, Breakwater Capital Group offers comprehensive financial planning and investment services tailored to your personal needs. With over 5 decades of combined experience our team of fee-only financial planners is dedicated to helping you be the best version of you. 

Why Choose Breakwater Capital Group?

Breakwater Capital Group is dedicated to helping families with $500K or more of investable assets achieve their financial goals. With a proven track record of success, our passion for helping our clients is unrivaled.   


We are proud to serve clients in New Jersey, Colorado, and Massachusetts, among other states, and we provide personalized advice and support every step of the way. 


Our financial advisors offer transparent, objective advice and are committed to always putting your financial interests first. If you’re ready to take control of your financial future with a trusted partner, reach out to Breakwater Capital Group.

The views expressed represent the opinions of Breakwater Capital Group as of the date noted and are subject to change. These views are not intended as a forecast, a guarantee of future results, investment recommendation, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. The information provided is of a general nature and should not be construed as investment advice or to provide any investment, tax, financial or legal advice or service to any person. The information contained has been compiled from sources deemed reliable, yet accuracy is not guaranteed. Additional information, including management fees and expenses, is provided on our Form ADV Part 2 available upon request or at the SEC’s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure website at www.adviserinfo.sec.gov. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.



The views expressed represent the opinions of Breakwater Capital Group as of the date noted and are subject to change. These views are not intended as a forecast, a guarantee of future results, investment recommendation, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. The information provided is of a general nature and should not be construed as investment advice or to provide any investment, tax, financial or legal advice or service to any person. The information contained has been compiled from sources deemed reliable, yet accuracy is not guaranteed. Additional information, including management fees and expenses, is provided on our Form ADV Part 2, available upon request or at the SEC’s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure website, www.adviserinfo.sec.govPast performance is not a guarantee of future results

Breakwater Team

At Breakwater Capital, we work with families across the United States, providing each client with a personalized experience tailored to their current circumstances, future goals, and timelines.

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After a brutal 2022 that saw double digit declines for both stocks and bonds, keep in mind only two other times in history have we seen simultaneous negative calendar year returns for both stocks and bonds (1939 & 1961), the combination of cooling inflation and more attractive valuations for both asset classes kicked off strong rally in the 4th quarter that year. Aside from a correction that started in the summer of 2023 that wrapped up around Halloween, the market has been on a tear, with only a few pockets of volatility flaring up along the way. Market concentration has been a factor with a significant source of the overall returns coming from a handful of stocks, though it is safe to say that the rising tide lifted most ships in that time. Heading into 2025, following back-to-back 20% return years, valuations hovered at 22 times forward earnings, more than 20% above their 30-year average and nearly 38% pricier than the p/e ratio over the last 95 years. A return to earnings growth was a welcome driver of higher stock prices, though truthfully much of the increase in the 2+ years since the bear market trough has come from multiple expansion. What makes that particularly interesting is that this is in spite of higher interest rates, where there attractive sources of alternative return would typically be a net negative for equities. Let’s be clear, higher valuations do not necessarily need to reset back to historical levels though that’s entirely possible. It is reasonable, however, to assume richer prices will impact future returns and leave little margin for disappointment when it comes to the data, whether we are speaking about the macroeconomic backdrop or idiosyncratic factors impacting individual companies. All this is meant to suggest the merits of diversification, which can and should be used as a tool to both possibly augment returns or reduce portfolio volatility. 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There are a variety of ways to protect one’s portfolio from raising cash, to using structured products or derivatives, but as the saying goes the only free lunch in investing is achieved through diversification. 60+ days into 2025 spreading out your bets is paying off with the vaunted Magnificent 7 down about 8% while many other areas are positive if not materially positive in that time. Sure, we have seen a number of head fakes over the last 4-5 years where the luster was seeming to wear off only to see these hyper-scalers find their footing and catch investor’s fancy, but all good things must come to an end eventually. Whether or not that’s 2025 or at some point in the future, we’ll need to wait and see, but do not expect me to keep wagering on a handful of expensive stocks alone. The capital markets are vast and deep, odds are when we reflect back in 5-10 years the top performing assets likely will surprise us. With a 5-year annualized return of -.62% for the Bloomberg US Agg, it is understandable why investors may be disinterested in this asset class. Stocks on the other hand, as measured by the S&P 500, have averaged 15.15% over the same period, that’s a nearly 80% difference and if history was to consistently repeat itself it would be fair to ask yourself what’s the point in owning bonds. However much like car insurance or homeowners’ insurance they are there to provide some real value (protection) should something calamitous happen to the stock market. What’s unique here is that typically insurance, comes at a cost, in the form of a premium, but with bonds you actually get paid (interest) while you are holding them and the real downside is opportunity cost or foregone returns, which seems a lot better than a premium payment for a claim never filed or a 20% bear market for that matter. Back to the present, in the aftermath of the 2024 election, markets reflected an optimistic tone regarding President Trump’s return to the oval office. The thinking mainly focused on a pro-growth agenda where regulatory relief and further tax reform would support asset prices. While questions remained about the impact of tariffs and immigration policies, the administration was given the benefit of the doubt that any approach would be measured and hopefully well telegraphed. Now roughly 40 days into his second term, the President has issued innumerable executive orders, some of which will be challenged in court while the impact of others still needs to be flushed out and the rhetoric on tariffs has been far more bombastic when it comes to historic allies and perhaps less onerous on China where much of the political capital and energy was spent in 2017-2018. 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Assuming a more measured approach around enacting reform should be welcomed and will likely have a positive impact on the economy and the markets in the years ahead. The public seems comfortable with the idea of reviewing expenditures, but the “move fast and break things” approach has been unsettling as witnessed by recent poor readings on consumer sentiment from both the Conference Board and University of Michigan monthly read outs. The irony of the “tough on everyone” approach, including our allies, may result in invigorating economic regions that have been prone to bouts of sclerosis. The Europeans seem particularly rallied around the idea that the United States sense of elitism is misguided which could foster some healthy competition though it could foment some ill will towards Americans and their corporations. The combination of less demanding valuations, more space for fiscal and monetary stimulus along with something resembling animal spirits would go a long way towards creating synchronized global growth which we have seen on a few occasions in the last several decades. Assuming you see something of a détente with China later this year so long as they allow for some modest currency appreciation and fiscal stimulus it could be off to the races for foreign stocks. Lastly, on the topic of interest rates, the real cost of money after all, the next few months will be rather interesting to watch unfold. March offers the February Nonfarm Payroll Report and a Fed meeting with the updated Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) where the possibility exists that they may shift from a slightly more hawkish posture to a more balanced tone, hinting at 3 rate cuts for this year, which would be well received. We are still likely 6-7 rate cuts or 1.375% away from neutral, but far less restrictive than we were just 6 months ago. If rates do head back down in an orderly fashion, it’s hard to envision a scenario where that’s not modestly bullish for risk assets. Away from short-term rates, which are really driven by Central Banks, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has been talking about the efforts to bring the 10-year Treasury yield lower. The rate has dropped about .50% since the start of the year though perhaps the fact that it’s been a somewhat rapid decline has served to spook the market somewhat as after all the bond market has been considered the smart money versus the stock market but we won’t get into that today. Since the 10-year rate has more influence on long-term borrowing costs, including mortgage rates, it was welcome to hear that there is extra attention there, though government policy is only one component of the pricing behind that security. If rates remain rangebound this year somewhere between 4-4.50% it bodes well for the economy and markets, rates falling too sharply would likely be the result of a risk of trade perhaps related to an exogenous shock and rates going too high (5%+) would start to put more pressure on equities and high yield bonds. To come full circle, there is a lot going on and perhaps a bit more uncertainty than would be the case with a newly elected administration that controls both chambers of Congress. Until there is further policy clarity and businesses are able to show their ability to grow earnings and improve margins, we would be well served to prepare for more volatility than we experienced in the last couple of years. Over the last 25 years the average intra-year decline for the stock market has been 15.4% so while we will not ask you to enjoy something like that we should be prepared for the possibility. Diversification seems like as good of a tool as any to provide you with a little insurance if there are a few more bumps along the way. Sources: WSJ, Barron’s, AMG, FRED
By Breakwater Team February 7, 2025
It may seem like the last 3-4 years have seen a business news cycle dominated by all things interest rates. There is no doubt the “cost of money” is critically important. Rising Interest rates can create both opportunities and risks for your retirement planning. Higher borrowing costs and market volatility may impact portfolio returns and income strategy. Understanding how these changes affect your retirement is key to making informed decisions.  At Breakwater Capital Group , we bring over five decades of combined experience managing financial assets for individuals and families with diverse goals, even in shifting economic conditions. We proudly serve clients nationwide through our Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Colorado wealth management offices. This article discusses how changing interest rates influence various investments and outlines actionable strategies to consider for your retirement planning.