The CBIZ Wealth Management team includes 24 individual wealth management consultants and professionals located in Cumberland, Maryland; Denver; Kansas City; Los Angeles; New York; Philadelphia; and San Diego.According to a press release, these CBIZ locations are expected to remain open and be rebranded under the Mariner name within a year.
“By affiliating with Mariner Wealth Advisors, these wealth advisers will have unique access to a broader range of services and our holistic approach to long-term wealth management for family offices, businesses and high net-worth individuals. For us, adding this group helps deepen our expertise and broaden our capabilities for clients,” Mariner Wealth Advisors CEO Martin C. Bicknell said.
Worldwide, mutual funds added more than $900 billion in long-term net
gains for 2010, according to a report from Strategic Insight, an Asset
International company.
In its 2010 Global Mutual Fund Review, 2011 Outlook
report, SI said close to two-thirds of the total flows came from bond
funds and one-third from equity/balanced products. Equity and bond funds
in aggregate surpassed $1.8 trillion in cash net flows since 4Q 2008.
Acceleration of net flows to mutual funds: Long-term
fund flows for the last decade stand at $5.2 trillion, or about $520
billion per annum – compared to over $900 billion in annualized net
flows to equity and bond funds post-crisis. In addition to the
accelerating flow pace, there has been a strong regional and asset class
shift in the last two years for the global fund industry.
From equities to fixed-income – and back? From
2005-2007, equity funds accounted for three quarters of long-term flows,
compared to one quarter to fixed-income products. Since 2008, however,
fixed-income flows gathered three quarters of long-term flows, and
equity fell to one quarter of the total (partially as a result of demand
for emerging wealth regions and accelerating use of ETFs). While the
size and scope of bond flows going forward is a debate in the industry
(witness the net redemptions among many bond funds in recent weeks), SI
anticipates moderated yet sustained bond demand around “safety &
income” alongside a cautious return to equity funds in 2011 (and a
growing proportion of equity fund flows over time).
Developed vs. emerging market fund flows: In the period
from 2005 through 2007, combined flows to local and cross-border funds
in Asia jumped to one third of the total worldwide, behind the United
States at 38%, but ahead of Europe, with 29% of global long-term net
flows. Flows were thus almost evenly distributed by region, although
Asia only accounts for a fraction of the assets managed in the US and
Europe, respectively.
SI said that since the crisis, Europe fund flows shot up to
43% of the global total (despite its very public debt crisis), as Asia
fell to 10% (despite its very public economic growth), due to a
combination of lackluster local flows and cumbersome sales processes for
cross-border products in the aftermath of the accumulator and mini-bond
scandals. The U.S. on the strength of its bond fund flows remained the
leader with 47% of all flows.
(Cont...)
Mutual Fund Industry Outlook for 2011
In its 2010 Global Mutual Fund Review, 2011 Outlook
report, SI said many of the forces that influenced investor behavior
and choices in 2010 are likely to remain in place for at least part of
2011: financial uncertainty, very low cash yields (in some developed
capital markets), a secularly depreciating U.S. Dollar, QE2, the debt crisis in Europe, lack-luster aggregate
demand for funds across Asia, regulatory changes and uncertainties,
convergence of multiple parts of the industry and investor
compartmentalization between “safety & income” and “risk capital” in
an overall context of risk aversion.
SI said it is
observing a "back-to-basics” trend, with distributors emphasizing
partnerships as they are re-evaluating supplier choices. This has
important business implications as global distributors and institutions
are re-assessing the expertise and brand of fund managers across asset
classes and investment categories.
While themes and
simplicity currently dominate the product landscape, institutions and
distributors around the world going forward expect a gradual shift
towards “bridge” products, leading towards investment solutions and
absolute return themes, albeit with geographical nuances.
2011 priorities identified by institutions and global distributors include:
Investment solutions (“bridges”);
Absolute return strategies;
Better, more focused client service;
Tailored information delivery/thought leadership; and