Are you frustrated with the level of growth you experience when you attempt to invest on your own? Do you feel left out when your friends or coworkers talk about how much money they are making in the market while the value of your portfolio barely budges? If the answer is yes, it is probably a good time for you to take the next step in investing journey and ditch DIY investing by finally hiring a professional. A good financial advisor can bring your portfolio to a higher level.

7 Real Reasons Why You Need to Hire a Financial Advisor 

A financial advisor can help you avoid the many pitfalls of DIY investing, including:

1. Removing the Urge to Trade on Emotions

You’ve probably become more than a little emotional when you think about your money. And when it comes to investing, listening to these emotions more often than not can end disastrously. It takes a particular type of person to be able to put aside feelings and make the right decision every time. A financial advisor is free of any emotional attachments and is able to choose whatever action is best for your wallet.

2. Failing to Employ a Disciplined Process

Hunches and tips rarely work out in the long run, but choosing and sticking to a proven investment strategy does. Your financial advisor has years of investment experience to use as a guide, and will never risk your money over a gut feeling or a rumor. 

3. Avoiding Rebalancing a Portfolio

Selling a well-performing asset to buy another financial instrument which is underperforming is crazy, right? Well, not if you know what you are doing. Most DIY investors are reluctant to make such seemingly counter-productive moves, but the pros know when it makes sense to take the risk.

4. Putting All Your Eggs in One Basket

The old adage, ”Only invest in what you know,” is good advice, but if you don’t have experience with several types of financial assets, your portfolio probably isn’t diverse enough to offer you very much stability. A good financial advisor will make sure that your investment strategy is well diversified to minimize down markets. 

5. Selling When the Market Gets Scary

The market is down for the second week in a row, and the value of your portfolio is dropping like a stone. Are you going to have the guts to stick to with your investment system? Most DIY investors don’t and wind up not only selling their investments for a loss but missing out on the very lucrative rebound. Financial advisors don’t get scared by adverse market conditions, so, their clients are in the market to take advantage of the rebound.

6. Trying to Call Tops and Bottoms

You have heard it a thousand times, “Buy low, sell high,” but attempting to call the tops and bottoms of a volatile market can cause you to lose out on a lot of profit. A professional investor knows that being afraid to pull the trigger on a trade because the fear of getting every cent from a trade is silly as long as you can catch the majority of the trend. 

7. Sleepless Nights

Investing on your own is stressful. If the market is up, you are worried whether you should ride the wave as long as possible or take your profit now. But if the market is down, it is even worse. You are terrified your investments will never recover. Why do that to yourself? Do your due diligence, hire the best financial advisor you can, and rest easy. 

Why make investing harder than it has to be? Take your life back and build a stronger portfolio by speaking with a financial advisor today. 

Franklin Madison Advisors, Inc. (“FMA”), is a registered investment adviser firm with its registration and principal place of business in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Registration of an investment adviser does not imply a certain level of skill or training. FMA is in compliance with the current notice filing requirements imposed upon registered investment advisers by those states in which FMA maintains clients.

This commentary and forecasts are limited to the dissemination of general information pertaining to Franklin Madison Advisors’ investment advisory services and general economic and market conditions and are subject to change without notice. The information contained herein is not intended to be personal, legal, investment or tax advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any security or engage in a particular investment strategy. For additional information about FMA, including fees and services, please contact FMA or refer to the Investment Adviser Public disclosures.

FMA may only transact business in those states in which it is notice filed or qualifies for an exemption or exclusion from notice filing requirements. Any subsequent, direct communication by FMA with a prospective client shall be conducted by a representative that is either registered or qualifies for an exemption or exclusion from registration in the state where the prospective client resides. For additional information about FMA, including fees and services, please contact FMA or refer to the Investment Adviser Public disclosures. Please read the disclosure statement carefully before you invest or send money.