Displaying items by tag: clients

At Morgan Stanley’s US Financials, Payments, & Commercial Real Estate conference, CEO James Gorman shared some thoughts on the bank’s future, and why he’s particularly bullish on its wealth management arm.

According to Gorman, the bank continues to look for opportunities to expand its asset management business through acquisitions. He believes there is more growth opportunity in this area especially compared to investment banking, lending, or sales & trading due to the industry being ‘non-consolidated’ unlike other parts of the financial world. He is also open to making deals in new geographies. 

While Morgan Stanley has traditionally been a Wall Street-based bank, Gorman has sought to increase its presence in wealth management during his 14 year tenure. Some of his most notable acquisitions include Eaton Vance, Calvert Research and Management, and direct indexing provider Parametric Portfolio Associates. 

He was particularly positive on direct indexing, since it has resulted in ‘huge positive flows’, and it has seamlessly fit with the rest of its wealth management division. Overall, wealth management is the fastest-growing part of its business albeit the smallest with $1.3 billion in revenue in the first quarter. 


Finsum: Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman has made a successful bet on wealth management as a key growth driver for the bank. He continues to believe in this strategy and is looking for expansion opportunities.

 

Published in Wealth Management

In an article for AdvisorHub, Karmen Alexander discussed the first 100 days of the new presidents of Merril Lynch, Eric Schimpf and Lindsay Hans. The duo have been hitting the road and personally meeting with the company’s roster of advisors, associates, executives, and investment professionals across major markets. 

They are also betting on a new growth strategy which dovetails with its parent company, Bank of America. Essentially, it comes down to discovering new talent and then investing in their training. And, it’s a major shift from its previous aggressive recruiting of brokers and advisors. 

Currently, it’s targeting about 200 new advisor recruits every quarter. In part, this is a response to the current attrition rate of 4% annually due to a combination of recruitment by competitors, exits from the industry, and retirements. The new trainees will also help to offload work and responsibilities from existing teams so that they can focus more on growing their business and serving clients. 

Merril is also offering incentives for advisors to pursue new clients. So far, it’s working as it saw a more than 100% increase in the number of new client relationships in the first-half of the year and a 150% increase in the number of net new households added. 


Finsum: Merril Lynch has two new presidents leading it. In their first 100 days, the duo have unveiled their new growth strategy for advisors and clients.

Published in Wealth Management

SEI is adding 3 new strategies to its lineup of model portfolios, using ETFs from Dimensional Fund Advisors. Now, SEI offers 24 model portfolios, encompassing a broad range of categories and styles. 

SEI launched its model portfolio offerings in 2022. Currently, the firm manages about $1 trillion in assets which include hedge funds, mutual funds, and separately managed accounts. As of June 2023, the firm had 7,400 independent advisors using its platform. 

In a statement, SEI said that the additional offerings would increase flexibility and help investors meet their objectives. It sees upside in combining SEI’s expertise in asset allocation and breadth of advisors with Dimensional’s fund management and research. 

Asset managers are increasingly boosting their model portfolio offerings for advisors. Currently, about $5 trillion of assets are managed by model portfolios with expectations that this figure will exceed $10 trillion by the end of the decade. 

Model portfolios give advisors and investors access to sophisticated strategies for minimal costs. It also allows advisors to spend less time on portfolio management and more time on servicing clients and growing their business. 


Finsum: SEI is adding 3 ETFs from Dimensional Fund Advisors to its model portfolio lineup. In total, SEI now offers 24 model portfolios to its advisors.

 

Category: Wealth Management; 

Keywords: #clients; #advisors; #model portfolios;

Published in Wealth Management

For Bloomberg, Nir Kaissar shares his thoughts on why Blackrock’s model portfolio business is lagging in terms of adoption, and why he believes this will continue. The purpose of model portfolios is to simplify the investing landscape for investors and advisors given the abundance of funds to build a portfolio. 

Now, Kaissar believes that there are too many model portfolios which is creating additional unnecessary complications for advisors. Some advisors will stick to model portfolios from a major asset manager like Blackrock or Vanguard given a strong brand name and lower costs. 

Currently, model portfolios account for about $4.2 trillion in assets, and this is expected to double over the next 5 years. While Kaissar sees this as a positive for investors due to lower costs and more transparency, he doesn’t share the industry’s optimism about the growth trajectory of model portfolios since many advisors don’t have a financial interest in recommending the product for clients. 

In fact, many advisors would be giving up revenue if they moved all their clients into model portfolios. This is also reflected in mutual funds having an average annual expense ratio of 1.3% per year,, while model portfolios’ average expense ratios tend to be between 0.15% and 0.3% per year. Given the incentives, Kaissar believes that growth in model portfolios will fall short of expectations.


Finsum: Model portfolios are a booming part of the wealth management industry. Yet for many advisors, the incentives don’t support full adoption.

 

Published in Wealth Management

In a piece for ETFTrends, James Comtois covers how Vanguard successfully helped its clients reduce their capital gains tax bill. This was especially salient in 2021 when many early-stage investors in companies that went public reaped massive profits as they cashed out during the IPO process. 

Some advisors placed the capital gains of these clients into direct indexing. With direct indexing, investors own the actual holdings of the index rather than a fund. This means that tax losses can be regularly harvested and accumulated to offset capital gains and reduce a clients’ tax bill. Such a strategy is not possible with investing in traditional funds.

Further, investors can continue to track their benchmark as the positions that are sold can be replaced by different positions that have similar factor scores. Research shows that harvesting tax losses can boost portfolio performance but more benefits accrue with more consistent scanning. 

These capital gains can be deferred for a couple of years into the future. Similarly, tax losses that are harvested can also be deferred for when the tax liability emerges. Overall, these strategies can provide considerable benefits to a select group of investors,


Finsum: Direct indexing provides significant benefits to investors that have a large tax bill now or in the future.

Published in Wealth Management
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