PANC 2014: Home Office CEO Insights

On the third day of the 2014 PLANADVISER National Conference, the chief executive officers of Pershing and LPL Financial spoke about how their firms are supporting advisers.

Pershing LLC, a BNY Mellon company, is celebrating its 75th anniversary in financial services outsourcing, said Ron DeCicco, CEO. Pershing, the nation’s seventh-largest registered investment adviser (RIA) custodian, custodies $1.6 trillion in assets, 20% of which are in retirement accounts.

“We provide solutions to our clients—independent broker/dealers [B/Ds], hedge funds and registered investment advisers—so they can serve the end-consumer,” DeCicco said. Pershing’s front end allows advisers to see their entire book of business, plus it offers model portfolios, a turn-key training program and fiduciary support, he said. Additionally, in November, Pershing will be rolling out a retirement plan network that will offer a suite of solutions to help advisers, B/Ds and RIAs grow their business.

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LPL Financial is the largest independent B/D in the country and has 70 individuals dedicated to retirement plans who work with 1,500 advisers, said Chairman and CEO Mark Casady. These retirement plan advisers support 40,000 plans with $110 billion in assets. Additionally, LPL works with another 2,500 financial advisers managing $390 billion in assets.

LPL retains 97% of its assets, “which tells me our clients are happy,” Casady said, adding that LPL has been attracting $20 billion in new assets every year. LPL has also become an adviser “recruiting machine,” having remained the market leader for recruiting advisers in the past four years, he said.

Casady attributes LPL’s tremendous success in attracting advisers with its “expertise in plan design, investment selection, automated rollovers and employee education,” in addition to a “range of technology solutions” that make advisers more efficient.

The biggest challenges Casady sees for advisers are threefold: first, fees and running an efficient practice; second, regulatory issues; and third, better wealth outcomes. LPL is able to help advisers with these challenges through its thought leadership and the 70 staffers dedicated to retirement plans, he said.

DeCicco noted that many advisers feel threatened by “robo-advisers,” yet technology can complement their business. He also pointed out that there will be $59 trillion of wealth transferred to younger generations by 2040. “Don’t just get to know the patriarch, but [get to know] their heirs,” he said. “[Generations] X and Y do want advisers’ help, but they want different interaction.”

Advisers’ growing willingness to offer investment advice is due to the fact that “investing is not getting any less complex,” DeCicco said. “People need help with investment decisions, which is why we offer model portfolios.”

Casady added: “If you look at outcomes, we all know that there is an epidemic of savings and investment advice in this country.” The best way to address this problem? Look at the needs of each participant, then help them get to better outcomes. “We have invested with Morningstar to create in-plan advice,” he said. “Financial Engines has commercialized in-plan advice—with a profit margin.” 

Morningstar Introduces Strategic Beta Classification System

Morningstar Inc. introduced the industry's first strategic beta exchange-traded product (ETP) classification system, to help investors better identify, compare and analyze strategic beta investment products.

The company also published “A Global Guide to Strategic Beta Exchange-Traded Products,” its first global landscape report about strategic beta ETPs.

Morningstar defines strategic beta as a class of investment products that track indexes that seek to either improve performance or alter the level of risk relative to a standard benchmark, representing a fast-growing middle ground of the active-to-passive spectrum. Morningstar Direct, Morningstar Office, and Morningstar Advisor Workstation, the company’s investment platforms for institutional investors and advisers, now include the new classification system and related data points. Clients of Morningstar Data will be able to license the data points later this month.

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Ben Johnson, Morningstar’s director of manager research for passive strategies, says: “The need to define, measure and scrutinize the strategic beta space has increased as investors have flocked to these products, and they’ve grown more complex. Investors need to undertake the same degree of due diligence when evaluating strategic beta products as they would for active investment managers. We’ve created a strategic beta classification system to help investors identify the strategies that straddle the active/passive divide.”

Clients can identify, screen and search for ETPs at three strategy attribute levels. The system first identifies strategic beta products as the investment style, then by the strategic objective of the underlying benchmark, and then the strategic objective at a more granular level. 

“Our new system for classifying strategic beta investment products will help investors understand their options and make more informed investing decisions. Because strategic beta products exhibit a variety of investment styles, the Morningstar classification system can help investors compare similar strategies and evaluate investments within the context of their traditional Morningstar category,” Johnson said. 

Morningstar’s report examines trends in asset growth, asset flows, product development and fees by region; assesses the origins of strategic beta and the various types of risk that these strategies look to control; and provides a practical guide to analyzing strategic beta ETPs. You can access Morningstar’s global landscape report about strategic beta here.

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