Investor Optimism Surges, Must Be Proactively Managed

Investors are not good at predicting market corrections big or small—but that doesn’t mean they can’t take concerted action to prepare for tougher times. 

A slight majority of U.S. investors, 54%, anticipate a market correction later this year in which the stock market takes back “significant gains,” according to results from the updated Wells Fargo/Gallup Investor and Retirement Optimism Index.

While still a majority, this is down from 62% worried about such a correction in 2013 and 58% in 2014, the previous high points. It should be noted straight away that very few investment advisers, if any at all, would recommend their clients try to predict and game future market moves, either positive or negative. But the result are still informative from a behavioral psychology standpoint.  

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Indeed, while the majority sees a market correction in the near term as likely, still most investors are not acting proactively to rebalance or otherwise adjust their portfolios to match their true risk tolerance. Defining risk tolerance in this fashion does not mean making guesses on market moves but instead taking a regulated and disciplined approach to periodically adjusting the portfolio to meet long-term objectives.

“One of the consequences of a protracted bull market is, unfortunately, investor complacency,” warns Heather Hunt-Ruddy, head of client experience and growth at Wells Fargo Advisors. “With a market correction inevitable at some point, it’s important for investors to check their confidence with a comprehensive risk assessment to determine how a market correction could affect their overall investment strategies.”

Again, the emphasis is on improving understanding of risk tolerance rather than trying to time the inevitable correction.  

Important to the results, researchers find that the “financial wound of the recent recession finally appears to be healing for many.” The percentage of investors who say they have not financially recovered from the recession is now 26%, down from 37% in February 2016. Similarly, 43% of investors currently say they know someone besides themselves whose financial situation hasn’t recovered, down from 70% in 2016.

Given all of this, the optimism index stands at a 17-year high, largely due to increased confidence in the stock market. Even though investors aren’t fretting over a possible market correction, 56% say their financial situation would be hurt either a lot (13%) or a moderate amount (43%) by such a downturn. The overall percentage believing they would suffer financially includes 60% of high asset investors—those with $100,000 or more in investments—as well as 48% of lower asset investors. At the same time, investors hedge when asked if they feel prepared for a market correction. Barely a third (32%) strongly agree they are prepared, while another 48% somewhat agree they are prepared. Fully one in five (20%) says they are not prepared.

The research further suggests that many more people engaged with retirement plans could benefit from working directly with investing professionals. Despite their recognition that they are not investing pros, only about half of investors say they are most likely to turn to a professional financial adviser to help them through a market correction. A third would rely on their own knowledge or research, while 13% would turn to a trusted friend or family member and just 1% would rely on financial news commentators. 

Investment Products and Services Launches

Hartford Funds Expands Fixed Income ETF Suite; Sage Releases ESG Intermediate Credit Index; ICMA-RC Opening Investments to Private Sector.

Hartford Funds Expands Fixed Income ETF Suite

Hartford Funds has launched its third actively-managed fixed income exchange-traded fund (ETF): The Hartford Total Return Bond ETF.

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This fund aims to provide investors with an actively managed core bond strategy that invests in U.S. government and corporate bonds, asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities, and foreign-issued securities. The strategy seeks to deliver a competitive total return with income as a secondary objective. HTRB has a total expense ratio of 0.39%.

“Advisers recognize that fixed-income offerings are a critical foundation of an investment portfolio,” says Vernon Meyer, chief investment officer of Hartford Funds. “We created another fixed income ETF to offer investors more options to optimize their fixed income exposure across all market sectors, which may help them to diversify their investments and reach their long-term goals.”

The fund will be sub-advised by Wellington Management Company. The HTRB joins two other actively-managed, Hartford fixed income ETFs sub-advised by Wellington. These funds are the Hartford Corporate Bond ETF, an ETF focused on investment-grade corporate bonds; and the Hartford Quality Bond ETF, a core bond ETF focused on investment grade debt including mortgage-backed securities and U.S. government securities.

Hartford Funds plans to launch two more actively-managed ETFs in the fourth quarter of 2017. These options would be the Hartford Schroders Tax-Aware Bond ETF, which would be sub-advised by Schroder Investment Management North America; and Hartford Municipal Opportunities ETF, which would be sub-advised by Wellington.

For more information visit, hartfordfunds.com.

NEXT: Sage Releases ESG Intermediate Credit Index

Sage Releases ESG Intermediate Credit Index

Fixed-income investment manager Sage Advisory Services has launched The Sage ESG Intermediate Credit Index. It uses a proprietary environmental, social and governance (ESG) factor analysis framework and a rules-based selection process in order to maximize exposure to positive ESG characteristics, while maintaining a high level of liquidity.

The index uses a three-pronged approach to select between 100 to 120 investment-grade securities with a minimum tranche size of $500 million from the Barclay’s Intermediate Credit Bond Index, and an issuance date within the last three years.

Sage says selection also relies on whether securities meet a proprietary ESG score, and fall within the top third of the group to which Sage categorizes them. They must also meet a controversy rating that flags to investors the potential environmental and social risks associated with the security.

“ESG is rapidly gaining traction with both institutional and individual investors, and we’re seeing the positive impact of these conscious investments across a wide range of sectors and causes,” says Robert G. Smith, president and chief investment officer at Sage Advisory. “With the Sage ESG Intermediate Credit Index, we’ll achieve our goal of providing an institutional quality index that further accelerates the momentum gained to date.”

Wilshire Associates will be retained as index consultant and calculation agent.

For more information, visit wilshire.com/indexcalculator/poweredbywilshire.htm.

NEXT: ICMA-RC Opening Investments to Private Sector 

ICMA-RC Opening Investments to Private Sector

ICMA-RC, which has spent the last 45 years serving public-sector retirement plans, is now making the VT PLUS Fund and certain Vantagepoint Funds managed by ICMA-RC available to private-sector defined contribution (DC) plans on an investment only basis. 

The VT PLUS Fund and the Vantagepoint Funds are collective investment trusts (CITs).

"We expect that making the Vantagepoint Funds available to private-sector employers will benefit public-sector plan sponsors through asset growth, which is likely to produce economies of scale,” says ICMA-RC president and CEO Bob Schultze. “This is a positive step for ICMA-RC, our current public-sector clients, and private-sector plan participants who can now invest with us."

The DCIO expansion will be managed by a team of veteran investment professionals.

Craig Lombardi, managing vice president of DCIO, will be responsible for the overall growth and development of DCIO sales to institutional investors and their advisers. Forrest Wilson, vice president, Institutional Sales, DCIO, is responsible for DCIO sales in the private-sector institutional market.

Lombardi, Wilson and several others aim to help plan sponsors improve the investments made available to their participants. ICMA-RC says, “The Vantagepoint Funds' multi-manager approach is designed to avoid the risk of concentrated reliance on the results of a single manager. The Funds' approach blends investments from multiple sub-advisers with complementary characteristics to broadly diversify ideas, strategies, and styles in an effort to provide attractive returns while minimizing risk.”

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