Jill Schlesinger

The Financial Decoder

4 Ways to Avoid a Financial Scam: Don’t Get “Madoff-ed”

By Jill Schlesinger | Jun 30, 2009 |

My last post about Madoff’s 150-year sentence aroused quite a response and requires that I clear the air about some issues that were raised:

  • I don’t think Madoff is worse than a murderer or a rapist
  • Madoff is not the scapegoat for the entire financial melt-down — there are no shortage of villains in this chapter of the American financial system
  • While many Madoff victims were the super-wealthy, many were not. Let’s not forget that charities have been forced to close as a result of Madoff
  • I consulted a with a couple of psychologists/psychiatrists who concurred that “sociopath” is a fairly accurate term to describe Madoff

Phew — with that said, let’s address a common complaint about the Madoff victims: they should have known better. This is a fair statement, because greed is a necessary component of every Ponzi scheme. But come on all you judgmental people — you get how this happens, right? Everyone is sanctimonious in the aftermath of a bubble. It makes me wonder: if everyone was so responsible, how did we get into this mess?

Yesterday, on WCBS-TV, I went through some of the warning signs that investors should look for to avoid being “Madoff-ed”. They include:

  1. Reluctance to discuss investment strategy. Madoff was known to tell would-be investors that he couldn’t disclose any of his strategies because it was proprietary information. Financial advisers don’t have to disclose every trade they have ever made, but they should present you with an investment policy statement and should encourage you to fully understand the strategy employed.
  2. Control of all aspects of the investment process. When hiring a financial adviser, there are three distinct pieces of the process: the advice, the trading and the custodianship. In Madoff’s case, he owned all three pieces, but in most firms, at least one of the pieces is handled separately, allowing for a third-party to conduct checks and balances.
  3. Use of an unknown auditor . Ask the adviser for the name of the auditing company and ask your own CPA or friends in town if they have ever heard of the firm and/or know of the auditor’s reputation. It was curious that Madoff ran a seemingly large business, yet the auditors were a small-time outfit that virtually nobody had known about.
  4. Be cynical about stellar returns in every type of market. It may seem crazy to question returns, but one huge, red flag of the Madoff scheme is that he never had a losing month and his returns were consistent to the point of being manufactured.

If deep down you think that there could be a problem, you can always seek a second opinion from another adviser. Or you can just trust your gut and move on to another firm.

 
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    1

    Blithedale

    06/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: 4 Ways to Avoid a Finanical Scam: Don't Get 'Madoff-ed'

    Sure a vital component of a Ponsi scheme is greed. But
    more than that it's the belief that someone else obviously
    knows so much more than you do that any concerns you
    might have should just be waved away as silliness.

    Thinking about money -- rather than work or even profit --
    is such a taboo in this society that we tend to believe that
    we as individuals are incapable of "knowing" how things
    work. Instead we entrust our financial well-being far to
    often in the "learned priesthood" of money.

    If we all would trust ourselves enough to learn the basics
    and to honestly believe that we should be able to
    understand what people are doing with our money -- at
    least at some basic level -- then we'd go a long way
    towards not being fooled in these situations.

    Expect to understand, expect details, and don't be blind.

  •  
    2

    Jill Schlesinger

    07/01/09 | Report as spam

    RE: 4 Ways to Avoid a Finanical Scam: Don't Get 'Madoff-ed'

    Great point...I think many people underestimate their own ability to learn and manage complex topics. It would be helpful if everyone realized that there really is no all-knowing Oz behind the curtain.

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Jill Schlesinger

Jill Schlesinger is the Editor-at-Large for CBS MoneyWatch.com. Prior to the launch of MoneyWatch, she was the Chief Investment Officer for an independent investment advisory firm. In her infancy, she was an options trader on the Commodities Exchange of New York.

Jill Schlesinger

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