Advisory Ranks Continue Shrinking

Terminations, retirements and those exiting the industry by choice have all taken their toll on the adviser headcount, which slipped 1.4% in the past year.

In “The Cerulli Edge Advisor Edition,” Cerulli Associates examined adviser demographics, training and retention strategies. The firm projects that adviser contraction will continue through 2016, with headcount falling by 18,600. With a shrinking pool of talent, retention of quality advisers will be at a premium and the costs of securing outside talent will inflate.

Broker/dealers, such as the wirehouses and insurance companies, are traditional entry points for new advisers, Cerulli said. In recent years, wirehouses have altered their strategy, aligning their resources with the largest producers, with emphasis on profitability over scale. Executives are content to stay headcount neutral, or even reduce their footprint.

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Adjusting the scale of wirehouses made sense to realign the value proposition and culture of the firms. However, the narrowed focus to the existing top producers minimizes resources and neglects the importance of training and development of new talent. At the other end of the spectrum, insurance broker/dealers continue hiring efforts, but adviser quality significantly trails the industry. As such, these new advisers are largely undesirable for recruitment.

In a flat or shrinking market, recruitment is at best a zero-sum game for broker/dealers, as firms trade the same experienced advisers. As one executive noted, “Retention is the best growth strategy.” To break the cycle of attrition, broker/dealers must take a multifaceted approach to increase the tenure and productivity of their advisers.

(Cont’d…)

Compensation Is Not Everything

Adviser compensation must be an element to any plan, but should not be the sole determinant of satisfaction, even within a wirehouse culture, which is notorious for fostering short-term thinking, the report said. To compete on payout alone will be a losing game, as advisers now have the option of 100% payout by operating their own business as a registered investment adviser (RIA). With compensation as one lever among many to secure adviser loyalty, broker/dealers will be better positioned to reduce their onus on recruitment, improve profitability, and increase adviser satisfaction.

Few channels are delivering above-average organic growth. The independent channel reaps significant benefit from adviser movement, but suffers as advisers exit the industry and retire. With no centralized method to bring advisers into independent practices, transitions are the lifeblood of the channel.

RIA and dually registered firms have exhibited the highest organic growth rates without the assistance of centralized training classes. Client acquisition and organic hiring effects have helped improve average adviser productivity. However, it should be noted that as many firms in these channels are in the earlier stages of their development, their growth rate is likely to abate and these firms are less likely to face retirement of their advisers as compared with the industry average. Conversely, wirehouses are losing significant assets from adviser movement, but fall short in replacing talent through productivity improvement and hiring.

Cerulli’s Advisor Edition is a quarterly research publication for advisers using the firm’s research for a thematic discussion of industry topics, including a range of market statistics drawn from interviews and surveys with advisers and industry executives. More information, including how to purchase a copy, is here.

Advisers Improve Retirement Peace of Mind

As part of its retirement study, Merrill Lynch Wealth Management developed an index to measure the current level of national retirement peace of mind.

Based on averages of responses to five questions, the national “Retirement Peace of Mind Index” at the time of the survey was 5.3 on a scale of 1-10. The index was calculated from responses to the following survey questions:  

  1. I feel content and comfortable about how I will spend my retirement years;
  2. I have many worries about what might happen during my retirement; 
  3. Thinking about my retirement gives me feelings of security and stability; 
  4. I feel anxious and uneasy about how I will support myself and my family during retirement; and 
  5. I feel well prepared for whatever may happen during my retirement. 

The survey from Merrill Lynch Wealth Management in collaboration with Age Wave found retirement peace of mind varies by gender, wealth, and use of a financial adviser. The index was 6.3 for those who work with a financial adviser versus 4.7 for those who do not.  

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“People definitely benefit from professional assistance when it comes to saving for retirement. We found that those who use professional assistance, such as advisers, were 1.5 times more likely to get better results in planning and saving for retirement versus those that tried to do it on their own,” said Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D., founding president and CEO of Age Wave, during a press call.

The key elements identified by survey respondents for creating retirement peace of mind include: 

  • Financial security: confidence in safety of investments and having sufficient resources for retirement – 60%; 
  • Health optimization: confidence in having resources and reliable care to maintain health in retirement – 14%; 
  • Family well-being, feeling assured that family members will be financially secure and can rely upon each other when needed – 14%; and  
  • Personal purpose: having meaningful retirement goals, faith/spirituality, social connections, and personal legacy – 12%. 

Beyond core financial advice, sorting through health care and long-term care options is the top issue retirees and pre-retirees are seeking advice about, cited by 75% of respondents. Seventy-one percent are seeking advice about making sense of Social Security and employer pensions, and 58% seek help with inheritance and legacy matters.  

The Merrill Lynch survey was completed in January 2013, in partnership with Age Wave, and included more than 6,000 respondents age 45 and older. Data is based on more than 3,000 responses from the general population. In addition, select study findings are based on an oversampling of an additional 3,005 affluent respondents with $250,000 to $3 million in investable assets (including liquid cash and investments, but excluding real estate).

The study report is here.

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