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In the summer of 1999, I left my position as in-house counsel for an insurance company and returned to the private practice of law. As a result, I rolled the funds held in my 401k plan into an IRA. I was a complete novice when it came to investing at the time but had recently heard a commentator on NPR claim the rise of the Internet represented a paradigm shift in the global economy. Based upon this information, I moved half of my retirement funds into a “New Economy Fund” and the other half into a “ContraFund.”   When the dot.com bubble burst a year later, I realized I could have fared just as well if I had flushed half of my money down the toilet and stuck the other half under my mattress.

Several years later, one of my friends – a Vice President in the Claims Department of my prior employer – decided to retire. The company was owned by General Electric at the time, and its 401(k) plan offered a surprisingly paltry array of investment options - most of which were dogs. Because the price of GE stock had skyrocketed under Jack Welsh’s leadership, my friend chose to roll all of his retirement plan funds into GE stock. A year later, he too would have been in about the same shape as if he had flushed half his funds down the toilet. 

Needless to say, my friend and I would have benefited greatly from the counsel of an investment professional at the time we made these decisions. However, no advisor reached out to us and, now that I have spent the past several years providing legal counsel to advisors in the retirement plan industry, I understand why.

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