Suze Orman: 6 Bad Pieces of Money Advice

Suze Orman: 6 Bad Pieces of Money Advice

Nicole Spector Fri, January 3, 2025  GOBankingRates

There has always been bad advice out there about what to do with our money. But now, in an increasingly digital age where many of us are glued to social media apps, inhaling particle after particle of “expert” information, we’re inundated with all sorts of financial advice. Some of it is salient and good; but some of it could be terrible for us, or, at best, not rightly sized for our needs and wants.

Suze Orman has become a multimillionaire as a personal finance guru, and is quick to call out a piece of advice about money that should be avoided. Let’s look at six bad pieces of money advice that Orman has bluntly struck down.

‘It’s Fine To Hire a Financial Advisor Who Is Not a Fiduciary’

This one may catch you by surprise, if only because you may not know this distinction exists. Not all financial advisors are fiduciary financial advisors. A fiduciary financial advisory has the qualification and commitment to act in your best interest and is overseen by complex and specific rules.

A financial advisor who does not have a fiduciary duty could act against your best interests by, for example, investing your money in a stock that they want to see succeed for their own prosperity.

“Only advisors who operate as fiduciaries are promising to always put the client’s interest first,” Orman wrote in a blog on her site in 2020. “If you are interviewing potential financial planners, ask them if they are a fiduciary and if they will put that in writing if you work with them. This should be a super easy request anyone will quickly say yes to.”

 ‘You Have To Send Your Kid to an Expensive College in Order for Them To Be Successful’

Like fellow financial expert Dave Ramsey, Orman doesn’t at all disavow a college education, but she does have a scrutinizing eye when she sees people going into student loan debt to secure one. Her philosophy is that college is valuable, but needs to be obtained affordably.

She doesn’t want to see parents place too much importance on the best of the best when it comes to education and their children’s needs. She wants them to be practical and act within their budgets so that they’re not putting their own futures at risk in the name of helping their kids.

TO READ MORE:  https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/suze-orman-6-bad-pieces-130007865.html

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