Learning From Missed Opportunities: How Financial Advisors Can Be Proactive, Not Reactive

Cole CravenAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Common wisdom suggests that you regret more of the things you didn’t do, rather than what you did do. While this usually applies to adventures like skydiving or saying “yes” to a spontaneous road trip across the country, I often see this aphorism in action among financial advisors. These are advisors who recognized an opportunity too late or missed something in a client’s retirement plan that could’ve helped them retire sooner.

To help others avoid the same fate, I’m sharing a real-life case for financial advisors to learn from. This story will show advisors how they can be more proactive, rather than reactive, when it comes to an important component of early retirement planning.

A $25k “Miss”

An advisor I met with showed me a $25,344 "miss." He shared it specifically because the missed opportunity was related to the client’s healthcare costs.

This advisor’s client, who was spending $40,000 per year on COBRA (about $3,400 per month), was under 59.5 years old. To avoid penalties on early IRA withdrawals, they were pulling from non-taxable assets first. That kept their MAGI low enough to qualify for Marketplace ACA subsidies — $2,112 per month to be exact.

After subsidies, their Marketplace options started at $3 per month. Not $300. Not $30. $3.

Unfortunately, by the time the advisor brought the client to Move Health, they were already locked into COBRA for the year.