Welcome to 2018.

Now is the time for New Year’s resolutions, so you might have important financial decisions to make.

If so, here’s a suggestion: Pay attention to that ugly prospectus, policy, or other disclosure that comes with your new stock or fund purchase. As you’ll learn in this article, it could save you from making a costly mistake.

Now, let’s dig into that prospectus.

Wall Street’s Protection from Liability

A prospectus is “a formal legal document that is required and filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission that provides details about an investment offering for sale to the public,” according to the always-useful Investopedia.

I know a little about this because I spent 11 years with a company that managed commodity funds and hedge funds. Part of my job was reviewing and sometimes working with lawyers to rewrite our offering documents.

Investopedia is correct that a prospectus “provides details about an investment,” but that’s not its only purpose, or even its main purpose.

From the sponsor’s perspective, the prospectus must:

  • Convince regulators to allow the offering
  • Protect the company from legal liability

Of those, the last is by far the most important.

Somewhere along the way, the investment industry figured out that the prospectus can serve as sort of a liability vaccine.

By disclosing in the prospectus every possible problem, they flip the table and put the onus on investors.

This is something most investors miss.

Here’s How It Works

Suppose you invest in the XYZ fund. Everything seems fine. You’re making good money, the fees are reasonable, you have no reason to complain.

Then boom—something goes wrong. Your account drops 50% overnight. Alarmed, you call your rep and demand to know what happened.

The rep explains your money is gone and it’s not coming back.

Freaked, you say, “But no one told me this could happen.”

The rep says, “No, we did tell you, right there on page 53 of the prospectus, section 12(d)2.”

You complain again. “This is my whole portfolio! I’m ruined!”

Again, the rep points to the prospectus: “Right there on the cover in bold print, it says this is a speculative investment, and you shouldn’t invest more than 10% of your net worth. Not our fault.”

That’s really how it works. You can complain, but you can’t say they didn’t warn you. That makes it very hard to recover any damages.

It also gives fund sponsors an incentive to pack every possible negative point in the prospectus. This makes it longer and even less likely to be read or understood.

So in effect, the prospectus mainly protects Wall Street from you, not you from Wall Street.

Your Broker Won’t Help

Now, you might think you don’t need to read the prospectus because your friendly broker did. Slick-Haired Jack understands it; he’ll explain what you need to know.

They’ve thought of that, too.

Somewhere in every prospectus and insurance policy—usually near the front—is a line like this:

“This prospectus contains all material information about XYZ fund. Investors should not rely on any other information from any person.”

Let me translate. That means, “If it’s not in the prospectus, it doesn’t count.”

So when you ask Jack to explain that paragraph about foreign exchange risk, you may get an explanation. But if he’s wrong, it is still your fault.

That’s bananas when you think about it. The firm pays Jack big money to help you, but it also says don’t believe a word Jack says.

So why is Jack even there? An excellent question. He must have other benefits.

How to Protect Yourself Without a Law Degree

Rule #1 is to not buy things you don’t understand, and rule #2 is don’t risk money you can’t afford to lose. But applying those to specific investments isn’t always easy.

So, what can you do?

Going to law school just so you can interpret a prospectus makes no sense—nor does keeping your money under the mattress.

Here’s my suggestion.

First, as painful as it may be, crack open that ugly document and at least scan through it. Pay attention to the disclosures about fees, risks, and conflicts of interest. Make a note about anything you don’t understand.

Then talk to your rep or whoever wants you to buy the investment.

Ask the questions you noted. Then go home and write an email summarizing what they told you. “Dear Jack, thanks for the chat, here’s what I think you said…”

Keep the e-mail, and you’ll have time-stamped evidence if it turns out Jack misled you. Will it help? Maybe not, but it’s better than nothing.

Something else you can do: Get your advice from a Registered Investment Advisor. An RIA has fiduciary responsibility to put your interests ahead of their own. Brokers need only verify the investment is “suitable” for you, a lower standard.

The problem is, RIA fees usually aren’t wrapped into the products, so they appear to cost more. But even so, the less-conflicted advice can be worth it. A good advisor will help you define your goals and build a strategy to achieve them.

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