Posts Tagged Trust Performance Report

Expert Says Banks No Longer Key Player in Personal Trust Business

New Tiburon report shows independent trust firms ahead and winning the race for profitability and amassing personal trust assets. Warns banks to wake up and change or lose big.

A generation ago, banks had an iron grip on the trust business, but according to recently released research from San Francisco research firm Tiburon Strategic Advisors, that once-commanding position is a lot weaker today.

“Banks have lost huge market share in terms of consumers’ assets,” says Tiburon managing principal Chip Roame, who says banks are spending too much time optimizing a “dead” business model.

The latest Tiburon estate planning report indicates that banks still control 40% of personal trust accounts. However, that share is concentrated in relatively high-end irrevocable trusts, which are both expensive to administer and hard to capture from competitors.

Revocable trusts now account for about two thirds of the $6.8 trillion in personal trust assets out there, and this is Tiburon where finds that brokerage trust operations and true independent trust companies dominate the market.

Parallels from the advisory business

Most of the early push in this direction came from the brokerage channel, the Tiburon report explains.

Historically, rather than refer client assets to banks and lose the business, the national wirehouses and some regional firms built or bought in-house trust units, while others found banks to partner with.

But this has been a bad decade for the wirehouse model. Full-service brokerage firms saw their controlling share of U.S. wealth contract from 43% to 27% from 2000 to 2007 alone, and the losses intensified after Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers imploded two years ago.

At this point, the independents and online trading platforms now have a bigger share of the market than the wirehouses—and they want to work with independent trust companies.

“Both independent reps and fee-only financial advisors have taken significant share of assets under management from the banks and full-service brokers,” Roame explains.

“These independent advisors found that as their clients aged, they needed a trust solution. The independent trust companies emerged to fill that need.”

As a result, Roame says the ability to offer directed trusts is a key competitive factor.

“Independent advisors want to manage the money and just hire a trustee for 20 to 30 basis points,” he says.

Boutique operations can shine

Thanks to directed trust, technology and new business models, the number of non-bank competitors that Tiburon tracks has quintupled in recent years.

Because most are start-up operations, these next-generation trust companies tend to be small compared to their counterparts in the banking world.

Trust Performance Report editor Bernard Garbo, who just released a new benchmarking survey on industry assets, says few truly independent trust companies will ever accumulate over $1 billion in assets.

“I see the independents as boutique operations,” he explains. “They tend to stay at mid-size to small because the successful ones generally focus on one or two specific areas of the market.”

Garbo’s most recent numbers support the Tiburon report’s longer-term findings. So far this year, the fiduciary industry gained 10 institutions at the true start-up level, where firms have under $500 million under administration apiece.

Meanwhile, the number of players in the bulge bracket and up—over $1 billion, representing most of the big banks—shrank by about 10%.

Profitability favors the independents

While industry leaders like BNY Mellon and State Street aren’t going away any time soon, the giants are also having a hard time gaining ground in terms of signing accounts and squeezing revenue out of the assets they already have.

Not counting State Street, which reported a spectacular 29% increase in fiduciary assets, on average the top 20 fiduciary institutions (over $100 billion under administration) actually lost 2.7% of their assets last quarter.

The smallest fiduciaries, on the other hand, managed to grow a little.

And when it comes to monetizing those new accounts, the independents definitely have the edge, Garbo says.

“They know their market and are going for it instead of trying to do all things poorly,” he explains. “As a result, they tend to show a higher return on their assets than most bank trust departments.”

Although directed trust may be the secret to growing an independent trust operation, wealth management remains the sweetest slice of the business.

The smaller a trust company is, the more of its fiduciary assets it tends to manage in-house—charging a management fee in the bargain.

As a result, while the Citibanks of the world may oversee several trillion dollars in assets, they only generate 1 or 2 basis points a year on that massive cash hoard.

Meanwhile, smaller players like Bessemer Trust can comfortably generate 30 to 40 times as much fee revenue per dollar in trust.

Without the deep pockets of a depository institution to fall back on, independent trust companies are simply “a bit more price conscious,” in Garbo’s experience.

“When you’re independent, you have got to make money if you are going to survive,” he explains. “There are definitely some bank trust departments that have picked up on that model, but they’re still a little behind.”

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

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Who’s Charging What for Trust Services? Part 2

Our new expanded trust industry survey for the second quarter of 2010 reveals who’s charging what for directed trusts and for investment management. We found some providers offer a better deal for bundled services. Either way, both plans have their advantages.

When wealthy families pick a trust company, pricing is a factor. But there’s still a lot of debate about just how much value vendors should pack into each of those basis points in order to win accounts.

The Trust Advisor’s latest quarterly survey of independent trust company fees shows that the industry is all over the map when it comes to picking a sweet spot between service and profitability.

Some vendors take a full-service approach and charge a bundled fee for giving clients everything they need or want. Others just provide administrative or custodial service at a rock-bottom price and rely on scale or other operating advantages to boost their margins.

Either way, trust officers agree that unless you’re already one of the biggest banks in the business, it’s important to resist the urge to deliver a one-size-fits-all experience.

“From our point of view, this is not a commodity business,” Anthony Guthrie, president of Atlanta-based Reliance Trust, which offers both bundled and unbundled options, told me. “How we differentiate ourselves from the banks is on service, and that’s not something you can reduce to an in-the-box product or price.”

Who’s Charging What for Directed Trust Services

Trust Company

State

Trust account minimum

Minimum annual fee

First $1 million

Next $1 million

“"

DE

$500,000

$3,000

0.50%

0.40%

“"

TX

N/A

$1,100

1.10%

0.75%

“"

DE

$1 million

$6,000

0.60%

0.60%

“"

DE

$1 million

$5,000 (plus add’l fees)

$5k fee to $1.5M

$7.5k fee to $5M

“"

KY

$1 million

N/A

1.00%

1.00%

“"

NH

None

$3,000

0.90%

0.55%

“"

IL & DE

$5 million

$20,000

0.40%

0.40%

“"

GA

None

$3,000

0.60%

0.35%

“"

NM

None

$4,000

0.75%

0.75%

“"

NV

None

$1,000

0.50%

0.50%

“"

NV

$5,000

$100

1.00%

0.80%

“"

VT

Varies

N/A

0.50%

0.30%

“"

SD

None

$4,000

0.50%

0.50%

“"

DE

$1 million

$8,000

0.60%

0.40%

“"

NM

$240,000

$2,400

1.00%

0.75%

NOTE: Accuracy is not guaranteed. Please consult the institution directly to confirm costs. The Trust Advisor Blog realizes that this is not a comprehensive list of all firms. To make sure your institution is included (or excluded) in the October 2010 of this survey, please let us know. We will be expanding coverage; please also include any other services offered such as investment management, special purpose trusts, HSAs, etc. Advisors and estate planners may reproduce this survey upon request. To contact us, click here.

Source: Websites and telephone interviews. ©2010 TheTrustAdvisor.com

Finding your niche

In fact, full-service trust companies find that once they focus on a market segment, clients will pay a premium on top of the roughly $3,000 a bare-bones provider would charge just to open the account. If not, they probably weren’t going to be profitable business anyway.

“Our customers are usually need-specific,” says Teresa DeMenge, senior trust officer at Zia Trust, which works with a lot of employee benefits programs and IRAs.

Prospects who need more than what Zia provides “really do need the bigger banks to ‘jumbo’ their services,” she told me.

While these clients may be looking for a trustee or custodian, they often end up requiring private banking services or other add-on expertise that a pure trust provider can’t really provide as a standalone operation.

Because those really big fish tend to demand big discounts, even the biggest banks may not really want their business, Bernard Garbo, publisher of A.M. Publishing’s Trust Performance Report, told me.

“You see people in the banking industry getting out of the trust business because being a full-service vendor is too expensive,” he says.

“Doing too many things is difficult,” he added. “Institutions that do nothing but personal trusts do not have the support of being inside a bank, but they still make a lot of money.”

The sweet spot

Of course, the big trust banks say they make their money by leveraging the sheer scale of their holdings. But while deciphering the basis points is not an exact science, it seems that you need pretty vast scale to overcome minuscule margins.

Crunching Garbo’s data reveals that some of the biggest players in the industry generated revenue of 0.20% or less on their managed assets and net margins under 0.02%. Based on that math, there are banks out there that squeeze less than $250,000 in profit out of every $1 billion they gather.

The more commoditized a trust company’s business it is, the faster its fees have to race to that 0.20% level in order to remain competitive, and the more efficiently it needs to run in order to break even.

Those 20 basis points are also roughly what it costs large and small trust companies to provide custody service, says Reliance Trust’s Anthony Guthrie, so we are unlikely to see pure custodians drop their prices any time soon.

Added service demands richer fees. However, the exact formula for what to charge for administration or investment management varies widely from vendor to vendor, and is often obscure when they simply quote clients an all-in-one bundled rate.

“I’m actually not sure I’ve ever had a discussion about how you bifurcate a wrap fee,” says Guthrie, who estimates that a discretionary trustee could easily charge 50 basis points for administration and support and another 50 basis points for any in-house wealth management service.

Of course, that isn’t pure profit. Companies like Reliance, for example, assign all clients—large and small—their own relationship managers, rather than make the little accounts go through a call center. Throw in expensive frills like local administration or investment expertise, and those basis points get eaten up pretty fast.

Investment Management Provided by Trust Companies

Trust Company

State

First $1 million

Next $1 million

“"

TX

1.10%

0.75%

“"

DE

1.00%

1.00%

“"

DE

$5k minimum to $1.5M

$7.5k minimum to $5M

“"

KY

1.00%

1.00%

“"

NH

0.90%

0.55%

“"

NV

0.50%

0.50%

“"

NV

0.84%

0.80%

“"

VT

1.00%

0.60%

“"

SD

1.25%

1.00%

NOTE:Accuracy is not guaranteed. Please consult the institution directly to confirm costs. Most institutions require a $1 million minimum trust account and there are can be additional fees for investment services. The Trust Advisor Blog realizes that this is not a comprehensive list of all firms. To make sure your institution is included (or excluded) in the October 2010 of this survey, please let us know. We will be expanding coverage; please also include any other services offered such as investment management, special purpose trusts, HSAs, etc. Advisors and estate planners may reproduce this survey upon request. To contact us, click here.

Source: Websites and telephone interviews. ©2010 TheTrustAdvisor.com

Where we go from here

If anything, what’s surprising about independent trust companies’ fee structures is not so much that they are resisting the temptation to race to the bottom, but that prices aren’t on the rise.

According to Guthrie, pricing at Reliance and the rest of the industry hasn’t budged much over the last decade. “There simply hasn’t been much price compression,” he says.

Teresa DeMenge at Zia Trust agrees that pricing at independent trust companies is stable “so far,” but warns that there may be change on the horizon for bank trust departments.

“Large bank fees appear to be rising,” she told me. “Medium-sized banks seem to have a slight increase due to an increase in operation costs.”

If so, this may make the banks even less competitive at a moment when many are already dumping their trust businesses entirely to leave the field to the specialists, Bernard Garbo says.

“It’s an old thing, but it’s as true in the banking business as anywhere else,” he told me. “Doing too many things is difficult.”

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