Within hours of saying “Yes!” almost half of brides-to-be update
their social media statuses immediately, according to a recent survey by Mashable
and TheKnot.com.
More than a quarter of brides-to-be (28%) updated their statuses
within hours, and 24% did so the next day. Before saying “I do,” brides rely on
sites like Pinterest, Facebook and other online wedding tools. Seven out of 10
women were already pinning on Pinterest before getting engaged.
A whopping 89% of brides-to-be use wedding-planning applications
to make checklists, browse gowns and stay organized. About 74% use online
websites for wedding music.
As options proliferate on investment menus, retirement plan advisers will have their work cut out for them, said panelists in discussing investment menus at PANC 2014 in Orlando, Florida.
Defined contribution (DC) plans often look upmarket to the
larger plans for strategies and best practices, said Barbara Best, founding
partner of Capital Strategies Investment Group. “Everything starts at the jumbo
market and gets pushed downward,” she said, “Service
providers are pressured to give those services to the jumbo plans and then push
them down market to smaller plans.”
Investment menus are no exception, Best said,
pointing to statistics that show greater adoption (84%) of target-date funds
(TDFs) in jumbo plans. But micro plans are catching up, with 50% including TDFs
in their investment lineups. Jumbo plans are much likelier to include money market and stable value options than are micro plans, and—no
surprise—employer stock is very frequently used in jumbo plans, but quite infrequently
in the micro-plan market. Brokerage windows are understandably more
prevalent in jumbo plans, with their greater percentages of sophisticated and
wealthier participants.
When looking at the value proposition of a
defined contribution (DC) adviser, it is clear that advisers offer their
clients a range of services, said Dan Steele, DCIO National sales manager of
BNY Mellon. The one service that is a constant is picking the funds and choosing the
investment lineup.
Other aspects of a plan and the tools to serve
it may change, Steele said, noting the amount of consolidation with
recordkeepers and technology advancements in DC plans. Some advisers do not act
as fiduciaries, and some use passive investments. But, he stressed, “when you
articulate your value proposition to your clients, picking investments needs to
be a big piece of it.”
A frequent topic at BNY Mellon is the evolution
of 401(k) lineups and the part that alternative investments play, Steele said. Not
only can alternatives refer to a lot of different types of assets, the term can
mean different things in different channels. “In the DC market, alternatives
are anything outside the non-equity style boxes, according to Steele. “We found
a proliferation of equity options and not a lot of fixed income in DC plans.”
Steele called the performance disparity between
DC and defined benefit (DB) plans natural, and said one reason is the
institutional investor management. But another is the offerings in each type of
plan: Whereas the average DC plan has 60% U.S. equities, the average DB plan
has 27% U.S. equities, he said. One reason for these choices is home country
bias.
Placing alternatives in the lineup should be
accompanied by an explanation of their function in the portfolio. “We advocate
the use of alternatives, not to boost absolute return but to dampen
volatility,” Steele said, “and that's what a lot of them do.”
Best wondered about effectively responding to
the plan sponsor who says he doesn’t need, say, a commodities fund in the menu.
“A lot of it is about education,”
Steele said, and teaching participants as well as plan sponsors about
diversification as well as dampening volatility with the use of real estate and
commodities.