Posts Tagged Roy Wheeler

Overlay Management Hits the Big Time Among Once-Stodgy Trust Companies

New “overlay” technology puts sub-manager’s real-time performance on trust firms’ radar screens. Benefits include enhanced performance and less mistakes. Our survey reveals New Jersey-based Concord Wealth Management steals the show.

More independent trust companies than ever are relying on overlay management software to streamline their investment process. However, finding the right fit can be difficult if you don’t know exactly what you’re looking for.

“Self-described overlay vendors run the gamut,” says Robert Testa, an analyst at Cerulli Associates who covers the wealth management industry. “Some simply provide access to third-party investment models. Some provide a more comprehensive technology solution.”

At its most basic, an “overlay” is simply a model used to determine how a given account should be invested. In traditional separately managed account (SMA) structures, the money is actually delegated to multiple outside managers to invest, but in an overlay system, the assets—and the ultimate responsibility—stay together in a unified managed account (UMA).

The UMA approach made sense for trust companies like Alaska Trust, which bought an overlay system from Matawan, NJ-based Concord Wealth Management about a year and a half ago.

    Guide to Trust-Friendly    Overlay Providers

Company

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Designs, develops and administers wealth management programs for financial institutions. 70 customers including Alaska Trust. Since 1975.

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A leading global provider of information management and electronic commerce systems for the financial services industry. Many customers. Since 1984.

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Wealth servicing innovation and platform technology modernization. 115 customers including Northern Trust. Since 1999.

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Offers managed account platform services to trust banks and institutional investors. 90 customers including Reliance Trust.

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Advisors for individual and institutional investors. Division of Natixis Asset Management. 30 customers including FundQuest. Since 2003.

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Industry-leading provider of structured portfolio management and overlay portfolio management. Since 1987.

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Investment industry’s leading overlay manager for enabling UMAs. 25 customers including Piper Jaffray. Since 1999.

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Provides real-time technology platform for integrating portfolio management and backoffice functions. 40 customers including UBS Global Asset Management. Since 2001.

Source: Internal Research.
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“We really felt that investment management had become a utility just like the electricity at your house,” says Matthew Blattmachr, who runs the Alaska Trust system. “But we didn’t want to outsource the actual management. We wanted to make sure those assets stayed in-house.”

Flexibility, customization

It took Alaska Trust about a year to pick an overlay vendor once they decided to make the change. After auditioning several platforms, they chose Concord because it offered the best combination of flexibility and a-la-carte pricing.

“We just wanted the overlay,” Blattmachr says. “Our backoffice already provides some of the other capabilities that go into an UMA solution. And we wanted to make sure we weren’t going to get a cookie-cutter solution.”

Cost was another factor. A Concord system starts at around $50,000, which can be relatively inexpensive depending on the number and complexity of the investment accounts  a would-be customer is working with.

Robert Testa says that while other trust providers use similar criteria to find the best match, their motivations are often different.

“The bank trust departments in particular are looking to move away from proprietary asset management in order to streamline their operations and costs,” he says. “And some want to move away from the old stodgy image by offering more esoteric products.”

Developments in the larger accounting and compliance environment are giving some trust companies—banks and independent operators alike—a new incentive to consider switching to an overlay approach.

Trust officers looking for a way to break out investment fees from other expenses in the wake of Knight vs. Commissioner may need to change their accounting systems anyway, Testa says. “This presents them with an opportunity to offer UMA-style vehicles as part of the normal upgrade cycle,” he says.

A lower-cost solution

Depending on the exact solution a trust company picks, the long-term savings can be profound.

Just moving from a traditional SMA approach will provide access to the same institutional-level investment options at a lower price—not to mention cutting down on the amount of time and money it takes to manage the managers.

Many overlay systems also contain built-in due diligence and reporting functions that lighten the administrative load of coordinating with the underlying money managers. That’s especially attractive for a fiduciary institution that needs to ensure compliance with a trust account’s investment policy statement, but might not have the internal resources to keep one eye on the portfolio at all times.

In fact, there are overlay systems out there that let trust companies cut their fiduciary compliance costs by 75%.

“You can reorganize your staff,” Testa observes. “Bringing in a third-party solution relieves trust officers of the responsibility of being pseudo-portfolio managers and lets them go back to being full-time relationship managers.”

Finding a way to outsource the models while keeping the assets in-house was important for Alaska Trust for both fiduciary and client service reasons, Matthew Blattmachr says.

“A trust company can have a difficult enough time convincing clients to give us control of their assets without telling them that those assets would be managed by someone else,” he explains. “We didn’t think a lot of people would be receptive to that.”

Best of both worlds

To put this story together, the Trust Advisor team talked to a lot of other great overlay companies—the chart above lists a few of the top players out there—and each has its strong points. With about 70 clients, Concord is not the biggest shop out there, but it won points for giving independent trust companies like Alaska Trust a “best of both worlds” solution.

Most overlay vendors focus on either the RIA market or on the big banks. RIA specialists tend to provide more comprehensive systems that completely outsource the investment management piece, while those that mostly work with big banks often end up selling just the models and not the software that an independent trust company needs.

Trust companies often fall in the gap between the two models, says Roy Wheeler, who heads up business development at Concord. While they generally prefer to hire and fire their own third-party managers (like a bank), they often need technological support to make the process more efficient.

“On the trust side, they want the overlay, but they need to be the overlay manager,” he explains. “That’s where an overlay system can add value.”

Either way, business is booming. All the overlay providers we talked to say their client pipelines are packed with banks and trust companies, and some are looking at 75% to 100% growth over the next year.

It isn’t hard to see why. UMAs have been working their way through the RIA world for a few years now, and should represent a $327 billion market by 2013 according to data from industry research firm Celent.

Banks and independent trust companies have been relatively slow to catch on, but they’re moving in with a vengeance, Robert Testa says.

“Some of the vendors are very busy right now,” he explains. “Even trust providers often complain that they can move at a glacial pace, but this is where the industry gets going on the overlay front. This really is the way of the future.”

Scott Martin, contributing editor, The Trust Advisor Blog. Steven Maimes and Jerry Cooper contributed to the internal research.

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