Empower Cites Strong Benefits for Managed Account Users

Several large-volume retirement plan providers have recently published research highlighting strong performance in clients’ managed accounts.

Participants making use of a managed account product often see long-term portfolio returns in excess of those realized by participants who do not use managed accounts, according to new research from Empower Retirement.

Empower Retirement President Edmund Murphy III tells PLANADVISER he is personally very excited about the new research, published under the informative title, “The Haves and the Have-Nots.”

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“I really think it’s a fresh new look into the opportunities presented by managed accounts,” he suggests. “Personally, I haven’t seen any research out there that more clearly and concisely makes the case for managed accounts. The findings are very compelling and show that managed accounts make a lot of sense from both the investing and fiduciary/cost perspective.”

Some of the topline findings make managed accounts look quite compelling indeed. Over a five year period from 2010 to 2015, Empower says managed account users enjoyed an additional 2% in average annualized returns in defined contribution (DC) plan accounts compared with those who do not use an investment allocation product. Specifically, Empower says managed account users secured a 9.77% annualized return net of fees between 4/1/2010 and 3/31/2015, compared with 7.85% for plan participants controlling their own asset allocations.

“Critically, these figures are net of fees,” Murphy explains. “We all know the focus on fees in the retirement planning industry has been a net positive for plan participants, but one thing to keep in mind is that outcomes matter just as much as pricing. We need to look holistically at returns and fees and look for opportunities where the fees may be a little higher but the performance is there to justify it.”

For this report, Murphy says a managed account is defined as a participant’s retirement plan account “which is managed by a registered investment adviser.” Different firms approach managed accounts different ways, Murphy adds, but “we’re looking in general at situations in which the investment adviser analyzes the funds available in the retirement plan and, using additional information supplied by the participant, produces a portfolio to help the participant meet his or her retirement goals.”

NEXT: Controlling emotion via managed accounts

Murphy says another key point in the research is that managed accounts can help participants “take the emotion out of investing and help gain the confidence they need that the investments in their retirement plan are properly allocated.”

He says the study’s analysis shows the variance in performance consistency between the highest and lowest performing portfolios was “so much smaller for managed account users than it was for those who did not utilize such a product,” at 3.93% variance versus 11.41% variance, net of fees.

According to Empower, the variation in these annualized returns for participants not using a managed account “may attribute to underperformance over the five-year period studied.” Evidence in the study suggests that the variance may be an influential aspect of what determines annual average returns over long periods of time.

The report also offers a historical perspective of product development in the defined contribution space leading to the rise of managed accounts. A key benefit that has led to lasting popularity and innovation for managed accounts, the study says, is that as participants age their assets are re-allocated based on personal factors.

“Periodic market shifts are addressed through regularly scheduled asset allocation changes based on an individual’s information and risk tolerance,” Murphy says. “The goal is to help keep their customized strategy on track. It’s an investment approach that takes emotion out of the equation, and one that may help mitigate investment performance swings over time.”

The study was conducted by Empower in conjunction with its subsidiary Advised Assets Group, LLC, a federally registered investment adviser. The full report is available online here

Numerous Factors Drag Down Americans' Retirement Goals

As Americans face a retirement income shortfall, it’s critical to understand how savings translate to income.

Even those Americans closest to retirement age still are not saving enough to meet their retirement income goals, according to the latest BlackRock Global Investor Pulse survey. Overall, 60% of Americans are actually saving for retirement: 65% of men, but just 55% of women.  Saving to live comfortably in retirement is their most important financial priority, Americans say, after saving money in general—yet most (71%) are concerned they won’t be able to reach that goal.

The reality is that Americans of all ages face a considerable shortfall in terms of the income they want in retirement compared with the income their savings can actually generate. Baby Boomers (age 55 to 65), for example, say they want $45,500 in annual income in retirement—but they have accumulated an average savings of $136,000, an amount that would generate just $9,129 in annual income, leaving them short by $36,371 per year.

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Daily living expenses weigh on Americans, BlackRock says. Americans have complicated feelings about their prospects for retirement—confident in their investment decisions, yet worried about the prospect of living comfortably. While many need to increase their savings to meet their retirement goals, they often feel pressure from bills and monthly costs. The biggest factor in influencing retirement savings is overall assets, BlackRock says, with 68% of Americans finding it hard to pay bills and save for retirement at the same time.

NEXT: More years in retirement and too much cash

Another challenge is increased lifespans. And longevity means longer retirements, which means many investors are worried about having enough for all those years. Others still are overconfident—feeling they are making the right investment decisions, even though their current investments will not yield the income they expect. One of the most common obstacles: holding too much cash. A peek into investor portfolios shows that more than half of respondents (57%) believe their holdings are diversified, even though they hold 65% of their wealth in cash.

Savers are still in the process of evolving to investors, BlackRock says, and although Americans can be quick to embrace new financial methods and technologies, their underlying strategies and money attitudes don’t always follow as quickly. Online banking is widely adopted, and most people use the Internet to help with financial decisions, but when it comes to investing, Americans have difficulty adjusting to today’s realities of longer lives and lower yields.

The BlackRock Global Investor Pulse survey interviewed 31,139 respondents, in 20 nations, including Canada and the U.S., which included 4,213 respondents. No income or asset qualifications were used in selecting the survey’s participants, making it a truly representative sampling of each nation’s entire population. The survey was fielded from July to August by the Cicero Group, an independent research company.

The BlackRock Global Investor Pulse survey can be accessed through BlackRock’s website.

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