May 2003 AIMSE Conference Is Your Firm Prepared for the Coming Boom in Alternative Distribution Channels?

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May 2003 AIMSE Conference Is Your Firm Prepared for the Coming Boom in Alternative Distribution Channels? Moderator: Mark Sullivan, AllianceBernstein Panelists: Jeffrey Cusack, Charles Schwab & Co.; William Santos, Gartmore Global Investments; Dean Patenaude, Jr., Affiliated Managers Group This session, led by Mark Sullivan, was fast-paced, well organized, full of useful information, and gave the audience plenty to think about in terms of taking advantage of opportunities in alternative distribution channels or managed accounts. The first warning was make sure that you don t bring in $1.00 in revenues and have $1.10 in costs! Dean Patenaude started with an overview of Affiliated Managers Group (AMG), which was founded in 1993 as a solution for small- to mid-sized firms with succession challenges. The firm s philosophy is that the affiliate investment managers should remain autonomous, the relationship would be long-term ( Our business is about retaining affiliates in perpetuity ), and the second generation would be as strong as the first generation. Today, they have 17 affiliate managers with 150 active products across value, core, growth, fixed income, balanced and international. They want to position as many products as possible to take advantage of alternative distribution channels. Current distribution is broad. For the high net worth market, AMG offers products through family offices, separately managed wrap accounts, hedge funds and collective investments. Mutual funds are sold both directly and via sub-advisory relationships. Institutional clients span ERISA, public pension, foundation and endowment, Taft Hartley and sub-advised accounts. In response to a later question as to where can you drive scale, Dean said definitely sub-advisory. Sub-advisory mandates are a very attractive, lucrative area you can still earn north of 50 bps. You can drive your business to scale because you only have one point of servicing. You have to provide outstanding service to that one point and treat them like your best clients. They, in turn, will act as a conduit to many other clients. Dean touted the triumph of open architecture, which has led to many opportunities, and noted that intermediaries dominate asset flows, crediting Schwab in particular with doing a fine job. He stressed that open architecture legitimizes outsourcing, which in turn gives managers enormous cost benefits and the ability to focus on the core competency, which is particularly essential in periods like this when profitability is down. At the same time, there is increased scrutiny of investment products, with preference for best of class. Investment management, however, is no longer the key component and is part of a bundle, which can be more expensive. With the intermediaries increasing market share, whether as a source for new business in the institutional, high net worth or retail markets, 1

there is also the need to have dedicated groups to fulfill intermediary needs and to customize. The objective, for all these entities, is to have the cradle-to-grave client. Dean reinforced the importance of distribution to a firm s ability to achieve scale and profitability, citing that packaging no longer defines the world. Mutual funds with classes A to N shares literally meet the needs of every market. He highlighted a few pockets of opportunity, informing us that the major U.S. market pools are over $32 trillion as of 2001. The institutional market remains fragmented, and there is a trend to move to small boutiques or mid-sized firms. The open architecture has expanded shelf space and product offerings. As individuals save and invest for retirement, there are great new millionaire opportunities not to mention the steady increase in rollovers or cash outs of 401(k) plans over the next thirty years. He also pointed out that the assets in discretionary accounts in U.S. banks are reaching over $1,453.8 billion. Where Dean differed from later speakers was in addressing separate account growth and urging caution in case of compression in this area. AMG is going to retain affiliate autonomy, but augment marketing, client service and operation functions where clear economies of scale are apparent. Want some examples? They offer a mutual fund solution through the AMG/Managers Funds, a separate account wrap solution through a Portfolio Services Group and back office operations through Advantage Outsourcing Solutions. There is also a centralized compliance function. These services are for affiliates and non-affiliates. The next speaker was from Gartmore Global Investments Bill Santos, who is the Executive Vice President of Distribution. Bill led off with the challenges he sees in today s market, emphasizing the high correlation across asset classes, resulting difficulty in achieving true diversification, and persistent volatility in a possibly lengthy sideways market. He then gave us an in-depth look at Gartmore, which is a $70 billion firm dedicated to providing asset management solutions to manage the risks in today s markets, while delivering new sources of growth. The firm offers a strategically diversified range of investments across mutual funds, separate accounts and alternative investments with the objective of superior risk-adjusted returns. Investment offerings are in three buckets: long-u.s.; long-international; and hedge funds. To complete its strategic diversification plan, Gartmore is looking for large cap value, mid cap blend, small cap blend, Europe ex- UK small cap, Pan Europe and Emerging Markets Debt. In the hedge fund arena, they want global, U.S. large cap, U.S. all cap, country specific and fund of hedge funds. 2

Gartmore s strategy is to complete its offerings through lift-outs and acquisitions, with the overriding principle that the investment service has to fit in Gartmore s philosophy and process, which is based on a quantitative overlay on fundamental analysis. Managers are given risk budgets, high value-added alpha standards (300 bps over the benchmark is the expectation; incentives for 500 bps over) and compensation on a risk-adjusted basis. Gartmore has positioned itself as an employer of choice for top portfolio managers. To attract talent, Gartmore offers equity ownership. Gartmore will also seed professionals as long as their approaches are compatible with the firm s overriding philosophy and process disciplines. When the record is ready, Gartmore takes it to market. As a major global player in hedge funds with publicly noted high rankings, an important objective is to become a dominant force in the U.S. retail market. Gartmore has $3.l billion in 15 strategies and 9 hedge funds as of 2003. They are in the process of building an array of strategies in a variety of hedge fund structures: registered products on an open-end and a closed-end basis; unregistered partnerships; and insurance-based structured products. Bill showed data demonstrating that hedge funds complement a total plan structure by introducing excellent risk characteristics and lower correlations to traditional asset classes. He allowed that in roaring bull markets, hedge funds may underperform, but over full market cycles, he expected them to do better. The role they can serve in a total plan is to help achieve consistency and better capital preservation over time. Today, there are over 7,000 hedge fund managers representing assets in excess of $600 billion. Switching to the mindset of investors, Bill reported the findings of a Mass Affluent Survey which he commissioned the Spectrem Group to complete. Nearly 80% of affluent investors seek the potential to earn money in both up and down markets, fewer than 7% currently own hedge funds and over 60% seek the potential benefits of hedge funds. They rely heavily on their financial advisors, but 95% say that their advisors have not recommended hedge funds. Bill then showed that there were 19 million households with assets of $100,000 to $1 million; six million between $1 million and $5 million, and 480,000 over $5 million net worth. How do you reach them? Open-Architecture Platforms! He believed, in contrast to Dean, that separately managed accounts will be the central force of continued growth, at the expense of mutual funds. He believes in the power of intermediaries in reaching this audience. He also talked about the differences between registered versus unregistered hedge products and then moved on to the challenges of distribution and product structure. First, there is a high need for education and awareness in the target markets. Second, how will the hedge fund strategies work in the traditional asset allocation models? With 3

respect to product structure and the registration process, today you see more of a cottage industry, but the trend is definitely to become more institutional in focus. The liquidity features are limited, which precludes some investors, and the tax treatment issues will be important to understand and address. You also have to understand the issues surrounding a private placement memorandum versus a prospectus. In summary, Bill acknowledged that the retail market holds many challenges, which will limit the near-term acceptance of hedge funds. Recent market conditions, however, have heightened the need for hedge products. The 33-ACT Registration of hedge funds brings a level of regulation to the industry, and they are serving an increasingly important role in a total investment plan. He concluded that this area holds great opportunities. Finally, Jeff Cusack provided a wealth of information on Charles Schwab & Co. and where he sees new opportunities in distribution. He gave a summary of Schwab s assets, which are hovering over $760 billion and actually hit $1 trillion at one point. Q1 2003 showed some exciting promise for Schwab with positive net flows, and Schwab is well on its way to becoming one of the dominant market leaders. More importantly, Schwab moved in Q3 2002 from the 10 th position in managed accounts to 6 th with $11 billion, which represents 2.5% of the $300 billion managed accounts marketplace today. The $11 billion today represents over 20,000 accounts, averaging $500,000 each. According to Cerulli, the managed accounts market is expected to reach $750 billion by 2008. Given Schwab s growing market share, if they reached 5% market share, that means they could be $38 billion by 2007! One of the advantages Schwab has is its structure at the first level, there is the Managed Account Marketplace, where you literally have access to hundreds of managers, and anyone can participate. Advisors negotiate fees directly with managers at this level. The next level, Managed Account Connection, is easier for advisors to work with due to managers agreeing to meet certain operational efficiencies. The Managed Account Connection currently includes a subset of 100 investment managers, where there is a $500,000 minimum and a choice of an asset-based or transaction-based fee. Manager fees cannot be higher than.80% for equity and.5% for fixed income fees, and many fees are lower. There is no research; however, the managers must have a 5-year AIMRcompliant record. Jeff then highlighted Schwab s new Managed Account Select, which is one fee for managers, transactions and research from Callan. The fees, beginning at 1% and scaling down, are very competitive in the marketplace. For example, at a $1 million, the fee would be 86 basis points. Callan has populated a matrix of 40 managers in this program, 4

and there is a $100,000 minimum for equity and a $250,000 minimum for fixed income. In addition, the paperwork has been reduced by 60%. Jeff said there are several areas being developed: SIM, where Schwab services over 5,900 advisors with average account size of $500,000 and retail for private client consultants. About a year ago, Schwab launched the Schwab Private Client area, where deeper relationships are established with these clients. As part of this program, Schwab clients have access to managed accounts through Managed Account Select. Over 165 private client consultants have used this platform and 134 are using managed accounts. Jeff reported only $400 million in this area at AIMSE at the beginning of May. A month later as I conclude this article, there is $500 million. The run rate is exceeding $100 million, and the average size account is $250,000. The independent investment advisor area has experienced the most growth. More importantly, the largest advisors (in terms of assets they control) are the most active users of managed accounts. Advisors are looking for relationships. Jeff believes this channel is early in development. With Schwab, they will get access to the Managed Account Research Center. There is a dedicated web site for the independent advisors and there is great information there, including a link to Callan s web site. They have access to the indepth quarterly analysis of managers, white papers, and updates. Schwab has also teamed up with Mobius on MMAPS, which is a database covering 1,500 managers and 5,000 products. In this system they can create, save and export proposals. They can do blends of managers and use Callan profiles. They are armed with all the tools necessary to service their clients. Jeff feels this is going to be a huge area of growth for Schwab. 5