The street less traveled works for financial adviser

After 27 years in corporate America, Scott Lask was ready to trade in his daily trip to White Plains. It wasn”™t just the commute ”“ the financial adviser said he was ready to take a different approach to investing, “one that put the client first.”

“I felt I could it better than I had been doing in big-box finance. Instead of using the traditional model of doing business and seeing people pay for services they never used or needed, I wanted that money to go into my clients”™ pockets.”

Lask”™s family was supportive of his decision to start his own business five years ago, which was the greatest motivator of all. “Their faith in me was what really helped,” he said. “I knew I could do it better. I didn”™t have the Wall Street mentality and wanted to expand on my investment approach and bring it directly to my clients.”

Lask says the stock market is “looking tired right now. I think it needs to digest the gains it has made in the last few months. If the market pulls back up, I might buy into it. I like indexes. If I like an industry, I”™d rather get the whole school of fish. If you buy into technologies, it opens up a whole range of industries.”

Variable annuities are “great for building pensions,” said Lask. “I buy them for myself and I like the guarantee the insurance companies provide and the predictability of income. That”™s the approach I take and one I don”™t think you”™ll find on ”˜the Street.”™ And while it”™s OK to be wrong on Wall Street, it”™s just ridiculous to stay wrong. If you”™ve been kicked off the ledge twice in nine years, hopefully you”™ll start looking for a more proactive approach. My goal is to limit losses, not encourage them.”

Dr. John Reed, owner of New Windsor Family Medicine, is a solo practitioner and has been investing with Lask for a little more than a year. “We met through BNI (a business networking organization). Both of us were ”˜solo”™ and BNI is a great way to network and meet people. I like Scott because there”™s a lot of communication between us. My prior experience with financial investment advisers is that I didn”™t hear from them. Whether it is good or bad, Scott wants me to know what”™s happening. What made me feel even more comfortable was that he”™d looked over some other investments I had that were not with him, gave me some good advice and moved on. There was no push to get all the apples I had in my basket.”

At the end of the day, Lask says he believes what separates him from large corporate finance groups is that, “While no one can escape dramatic downturns, there”™s a big difference between being sucked down the drain or coming out in one piece. I like to come out in one piece, and I like my clients to do the same.”

Everett Smith, owner of Sentinel Publishing in New Windsor, also likes Lask”™s approach to finance. “He keeps in touch ”“ he doesn”™t just take your account and then never get in touch with you. Scott keeps me in the loop, let”™s me know what he”™s doing and what he”™s thinking of doing. It”™s been nice to make some money back from the losses I took in 2008, thanks to his guidance.”

Lask said, “Rational people don”™t wear shorts in the winter or wear a wool overcoat in the middle of July. Rational investors know there is a season for different sectors, different markets as well as different financial instruments. The goal is to eliminate the dead weight. I have a ranking system from zero to five, measuring specific supply-and-demand criteria. Anything below a three is eliminated. We want to go where the strength is, watch where the markets are heading. A few months ago, bank bonds looked very attractive. I took advantage of it, and my clients made between 15-25 percent back on their investment. Now, energy and small companies are looking good.

Basically, you follow supply and demand. That”™s where the money is. My job is making sure I”™m on top of it.”