InvestmentsSep 19 2017

IFAs are still in the eye of the storm with managed assets

  • To understand the growth of discretionary services.
  • To learn the difference between discretionary and multi-manager assets.
  • To ascertain whether a managed service is right for your clients.
  • To understand the growth of discretionary services.
  • To learn the difference between discretionary and multi-manager assets.
  • To ascertain whether a managed service is right for your clients.
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CPD
Approx.30min
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CPD
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CPD
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IFAs are still in the eye of the storm with managed assets

We have all been through RDR, adjusted our business models accordingly and settled in to the brave new world of commission free, unbiased, client investing.

Many adviser businesses, whether restricted or independent, now have a centralised investment proposition (CIP) at their heart. Following guidance from the regulators these CIPs will contain a range of investment options with choices that are suitable for the majority of clients.

Typically, a CIP will contain multi-asset funds (usually fund of funds), Bespoke discretionary services and discretionary managed portfolio services.

It is no coincidence that the growth of discretionary services has coincided with the RDR, as advisers looked to outsource some or all of their investment process.

The old model of advisers managing their clients’ portfolios using single asset funds is slowly becoming a thing of the past.

It is accepted that entrusting client assets to full time, well resourced investment specialists (fund managers and discretionary managers) is going to be in the best interests of the client.

Of course there are some adviser firms that are big enough and resourced enough to operate their own asset management arm, but these are few and far between.

I have not come across any incidences of double charging in discretionary management over the last eight years or so.

Growth in multi-asset and multi-manager funds has been a major success story over the last 15 years, which according to the Investment Association have grown from £11bn at the beginning of the new century, risen to £34.8bn in 2007 and stood at £127.2bn in 2016.

Perhaps more impressively this accounts for 12.2 per cent of all funds in 2016 compared to 7.4 per cent in 2007. 

I am ‘veteran’ enough to remember back in the 1980s when multi-manager funds were viewed with some scepticism with whisperings of double charging and a feeling that advisers were not doing their jobs if they left their fund selection to a multi-manager.

However, with the above figures, you can more or less pin-point (early 2000s) when the outsourcing story had begun to take off, and really taken hold in the period leading up to implementation of the Retail Distribution Review.

So, what has all this got to do with discretionary managed portfolio services? I think there is a parallel to be drawn here in the evolution of this investment solution.

It is less than ten years since Defaqto started researching discretionary managed services (bespoke and MPS). Many of the people we talked to in the industry told us that discretionary services were rife with hidden charges and double charging was common.

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