Monday, July 7, 2008

Rise Of The IFAs - The Story So Far


The Singapore financial services industry has undergone a seismic shift since October 2001 when the Singapore Parliament passed a new legislation called the Financial Advisers Act (FAA). The legislation became operational in the third quarter of 2002. The Act consolidated the regulatory regime governing the provision of financial advisory services in respect to life insurance products and investment products such as unit trusts, stocks and futures contracts. This new act gave birth to a new financial intermediary, the IFA.

But the odds looked to be firmly stacked against the nascent IFA industry which was formed of small outfits without big war chests, public awareness and IT infrastructure support. They also faced the uphill task of changing a sales-oriented culture to an advice-based culture and constant challenge to recruit, train and retain competent advisers.

Now almost 5 years after the enactment of the Financial Aadvisers Aact (FAA), is Singapore’s fledgling IFA community fighting a losing battle against the hegemony of the banks and insurance companies, or is it gradually gaining ground and credibility?

For the consumer or man-in-the-street, ‘holistic financial planning’ after the FAA has taken a new meaning. Before the FAA, financial planning was almost synonymous with insurance planning. Iinsurance companies’ sales representatives, also known as tied agents, sold a myriad of insurance products that were marketed as tools for retirement planning, education planning, risk management, income protection, wealth accumulation, and other financial goals. Stocks and property were the other wealth accumulation vehicles used by some investors. For the higher net-worth individuals, private banking offered additional investment options, but this was the domain of the wealthy minority. To the masses, investing was a rich man’s activity that required huge capital outlay.

Insurance products such as whole life and endowment plans were marketed as a hybrid between insurance and savings plans, and were very popular instruments for retirement and education planning. Both types of insurance plans guarantee the principal with some capital appreciation in the form of non-guaranteed bonus. Many were attracted by the high bonus projection, but some of these were found to be unrealistic and resulted in revisions and cuts, much to the ire of the policy holders.

According to a story from ‘The Business Times’ dated September 2006, all except one insurance company had cut bonuses. The report also noted that the insurance industry began to impose a cap on long-term projections for policies in the mid-1990s. The cap started at 7% between 1994 and 1997; it was later reduced to 6% and since 2002, to 5.25%. This was largely due to the insurance companies’ inability to meet the original projections as there was a dearth of long-dated bonds, and their underlying assets underperformed.

Investment-linked policies bundled term insurance and investment, and were introduced in the early 1990s by insurance companies to allow policyholders to partake in investment and generate better returns for the policies. The controversy over this type of insurance plan was the high mortality charges that made it uneconomical for either insurance or investing purpose when compared to other alternatives,especially for certain age groups like retirees. Mortality charges are the costs of insurance and in such a policy, it can escalate very fast as the age of the policyholder increases. The charges are paid via the deduction in the units of the fund, and this deduction incurs transaction costs like administration fees and bid-offer spread and market risk, adding to the charges. Some policyholders complained that they were unaware of the escalating mortality charges that could affect their investments adversely, leaving them with poor or no returns.

UNIT TRUSTS IN SINGAPORE

Unit trusts became available to Singapore investors in the late 1980s. Otherwise known as Collective Iinvestment Schemes or Mutual Funds, they are hugely popular in more developed financial markets in the US, UK and Aaustralia as a wealth accumulator for pensions or superannuation, retirement nest egg, etc. The low capital outlay, relatively lower volatility, diversification and ability to invest globally with experienced fund managers are the key attractions.

Unit trusts were distributed or sold by banks, fund house direct sales representatives and investment brokers in the early days in Singapore. Banks set up their own asset management division, e.g. DBS Aasset Management and UOB Asset Management to compete with international fund houses such as Aaberdeen Asset Management Aasia, Fidelity Investments, and Schroder Investment Management in the lucrative fund management industry. International fund houses use banks as one of their distribution channels and to this day, it is still the strongest distribution channel for the fund houses in terms of sales.

Unit trusts made negative headlines during the Aasian financial crisis in 1997 and the dot-com bubble burst in 2000 for incurring hefty negative returns. The CPFIS-approved funds most notably tainted investor sentiment as 82% of 113 CPF-approved unit trusts and 71% of the 76 investment-linked insurance products suffered negative returns in 2000 amidst the global markets’ downturn. Some investors who suffered heavy losses during that period may still be reeling from those losses. But with global markets picking up from 2003, coupled with stricter regulations on the CPFIS-approved funds which put a cap on fees and weeded out poor performing funds, unit trusts have restored some of the lustre.

Bancassurance was born when banks tied up with insurance companies to offer insurance products as part of their suite of financial products. Typically, banks will offer insurance products of only one insurance company and unit trusts from numerous international fund houses, excluding direct competitors like other banks’ funds.

Banks have built strong brands in providing financial services through deft marketing strategies. They are able to cross-sell different financial products to different customer groups as they are privy to their own customer information. For example, a fixed deposit customer can easily become a unit trusts customer as the bank’s financial consultants know when the customer’s fixed deposits are maturing. Before the FAA, even bank tellers could ‘sell’ funds.

Although the banks dominate unit trust distribution, for many of them, the challenge is the high attrition rate among their frontline sales staff (financial consultants) that has resulted in poor after-sales service and a lack of continuity. Generally, the remuneration structure is based on a fixed basic salary, supplemented by additional commissions if certain sales quotas are met in different product classes like mortgage loans, unit trusts and fixed deposits. The clientele built by a financial consultant is owned by the bank so when a financial consultant leaves the bank, a new financial consultant will take over the clientele. Most of the time, the new financial consultant will focus on new business and the service provided to the clientele he took over will usually be more sales-oriented and transactional as revenue is derived from transactions in the form of sales charges.

In light of the financial advisory landscape before the FAA, holistic financial planning for consumers meant that they had to shop around for different financial products on their own. For example, he would get insurance from an insurance broker who had access to a few insurance companies’ products, an investment-linked policy from a tied agent, mortgage loan and unit trusts investing through a bank financial consultant or investment broker. However in practice, the lack of consolidation made portfolio tracking difficult, comparing products for best value arduous and getting a thorough financial health analysis cumbersome. This ultimately led to consumers receiving conflicting financial advice from different financial intermediaries where the sum of each part may not constitute a healthy whole.

With the FAA and the subsequent birth of the IFA, the promise of true “holistic financial planning” or “true advice” as some put it, looked more plausible.

THE IFA'S UNIQUE PROPOSITION

ideally, what the FAA aims to bring to the end consumer is better value and financial advice. Through one point of contact, consolidation allows the consumer to have access to a whole range of financial services, spanning insurance and investments to estate and tax planning backed by a wide range of products from many product providers. Typically, an IFA offers insurance and investment products from more than 4 product providers in each product class.

IFAs endeavour to represent client’s interests first, instead of the product provider’s. This is possible because IFA firms are not owned by product providers and are not compelled to meet any sales quota set by product providers. Instead, they may have more bargaining power with product providers since they are not tied to them and can move to another product provider should the products be less competitive. The relationship between a product provider and IFA where the product provider is just one of the many suppliers that the IFA has access to, benefits the client in terms of value and cost.

With the IFA in place to research and compare products, product providers can no longer operate under a cloak of consumers’ ignorance and have to constantly innovate to create better products to compete effectively. IFAs can pick the best of breed in each product class to create the best value for their clients, given each client’s financial situation. For example, an IFA is able to select different types of insurance products from different insurance companies, each having its own strengths in different areas. Product recommendations must be substantiated with the basis of recommendation, along with the client’s risk profile and investment objectives. All these form part of the MAS compliance and disclosure regulatory framework set in place through the FAA.

WORD-OF-MOUTH EFFECT

As IFA are independently-owned, the entrepreneurial drive to grow the business makes providing quality advice and service integral for long-term survival and growth. Faced with the the immense marketing clout of financial institutions and their own lack of marketing budget, the word-of-mouth effect is especially crucial for the IFAs to grow their business. The word-of-mouth effect, although slow, is nevertheless the most effective marketing tool to build a sustainable business as it stems from positive client experience. As a service-oriented profession, positive client experience is the lifeblood of a financial advisory practice.

Part of the positive client experience is attributable to client education. Being a relative unknown dispensing investment advice, IFAs have to educate clients to gain their confidence. This education involves explaining the investment mechanism to manage their client’s expectations and cultivating the right investor habits so that the client does not run for the door each time the markets turn volatile.

And the approach seems to be bearing fruits. According to a report by research group Cerulli Aassociates, fund managers have feedbacked that the “stickiness” of assets brought in by the IFAs is far greater than that from the banks, and IFAs are gaining clients disgruntled from the rather “high street” approach that many private banks have taken with clients who have found a far more personalized service from financial advisers.

Follow-up services like periodic portfolio reviews, with rebalancing of investment portfolio to align portfolio asset allocation to the client’s risk profile and investment objectives, also goes a long way in building the client’s confidence.

ALIGNING THE INTERESTS OF THE IFA & THE CLIENT

IFA’s remuneration structure comes in various models. There is the traditional transaction-based pure commission model where the IFA earns a cut from the upfront fee or sales charge from the products sold, or the fee-only model where all commissions from product providers are rebated to the client and the IFA only collects a fixed fee. There is also a mixture of fees and commissions, or the “wrap account” model.

The “wrap account” model is seen to align the interests of both the IFA and the clients by tying the IFA’s remuneration to the client investment portfolio’s performance. This wrap account model encompasses an annual recurring fee for managing the clients’ portfolio. This recurring fee is also known as the “annual wrap fee”. The annual wrap fees are calculated as a percentage of the total value of the investment portfolio. Therefore, if the client’s investment portfolio value increases, so will the IFA’s remuneration. This model also provides “free-switching” where client can switch funds without incurring any transaction cost. This helps to promote active rebalancing.

Thus, such a structure ensures that the client’s long-term interests are well taken care of by the IFA as the IFA will be rewarded for growing the client’s investment portfolio value. There is an increasing trend among the IFAs to move away from a transaction-based remuneration model towards this wrap account model. The recurrent wrap fee also ensures that the IFA provides quality on-going service to keep clients’ assets under his advice.

The ability to offer various remuneration models is also a benefit as the IFA is then able to cater to different market segments. For instance, a pure commission model may work for clients with a small investment capital as the commission paid may be lower than the minimum fee in a pure fee-based model. For high net-worth clients, a mixture of fee and commissionor fee-only model may be more ideal, considering that the investment capital is large.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

About Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF)

An exchange-traded fund (or ETF) is an investment vehicle traded on stock exchanges, much like stocks or bonds. An ETF holds assets such as stocks or bonds and trades at approximately the same price as the net asset value of its underlying assets over the course of the trading day. Most ETFs track an index, such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average or the S&P 500. ETFs may be attractive as investments because of their low costs, tax efficiency, and stock-like features. In a survey of investment professionals conducted in March 2008, 67% called ETFs the most innovative investment vehicle of the last two decades and 60% reported that ETFs have fundamentally changed the way they construct investment portfolios.

An ETF combines the valuation feature of a mutual fund or unit trust, which can be purchased or redeemed at the end of each trading day for its net asset value, with the tradability feature of a closed-end fund, which trades throughout the trading day at prices that may be substantially more or less than its net asset value. Closed-end funds are not considered to be exchange-traded funds, even though they are funds and are traded on an exchange. ETFs have been available in the US since 1993 and in Europe since 1999. ETFs traditionally have been index funds, but in 2008 the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission began to authorize the creation of actively-managed ETFs.

Most investors can buy and sell ETF shares only in market transactions, but institutional investors can redeem large blocks of shares of the ETF (known as "creation units") for a "basket" of the underlying assets or, alternatively, exchange the underlying assets for creation units. This creation and redemption of shares enables institutions to engage in arbitrage that causes the value of the ETF to approximate the net asset value of the underlying assets.

Investment uses

ETFs generally provide the easy diversification, low expense ratios, and tax efficiency of index funds, while still maintaining all the features of ordinary stock, such as limit orders, short selling, and options. Because ETFs can be economically acquired, held, and disposed of, some investors invest in ETF shares as a long-term investment for asset allocation purposes, while other investors trade ETF shares frequently to implement market timing investment strategies.

Among the advantages of ETFs are the following:

  • Lower costs - ETFs generally have lower costs than other investment products because most ETFs are not actively managed and because ETFs are insulated from the costs of having to buy and sell securities to accommodate shareholder purchases and redemptions. ETFs typically have lower marketing, distribution and accounting expenses.
  • Buying and selling flexibility - ETFs can be bought and sold at current market prices at any time during the trading day, unlike mutual funds and unit trusts, which can only be traded at the end of the trading day. As publicly traded securities, their shares can be purchased on margin and sold short, enabling the use of hedging strategies, and traded using stop orders and limit orders, which allow investors to specify the price points at which they are willing to trade.
  • Tax efficiency - ETFs generally generate relatively low capital gains, because they typically have low turnover of their portfolio securities. While this is an advantage they share with other index funds, their tax efficiency is further enhanced because they do not have to sell securities to meet investor redemptions.
  • Market exposure and diversification - ETFs provide an economical way to rebalance portfolio allocations and to "equitize" cash by investing it quickly. An index ETF inherently provides diversification across an entire index. ETFs offer exposure to a diverse variety of markets, including broad-based indexes, broad-based international and country-specific indexes, industry sector-specific indexes, bond indexes, and commodities.
  • Transparency - ETFs, whether index funds or actively managed, have transparent portfolios and are priced at frequent intervals throughout the trading day.


Some of these advantages derive from the status of most ETFs as index funds.

About Hedge Fund

A hedge fund is a private, largely unregulated pool of capital whose managers can buy or sell any assets, bet on falling as well as rising assets and participate substantially in profits from money invested. It charges both a performance fee and a management fee. Typically open only to qualified investors, hedge fund activity in the public securities markets has grown substantially, accounting for approximately 10% of all U.S. fixed-income security transactions, 35% of U.S. activity in derivatives with investment-grade ratings, 55% of the trading volume for emerging-market bonds, and 30% of equity trades. Hedge Funds dominate certain specialty markets such as trading within derivatives with high-yield ratings and distressed debt.

In the United States, an investment fund must be open to a limited number of accredited investors in order to be exempt from direct regulation. While there is no legal definition for "hedge fund" under U.S. securities laws and regulations, typically they include any investment fund that, because of an exemption from certain regulation that otherwise apply to mutual funds, brokerage firms or investment advisors, can invest in more complex and risky investments than a public fund might. Hedge funds managed from other countries have similar relationships with their national regulators. Since a hedge fund's investment activities are limited only by the contracts governing the particular fund, it can make greater use of complex investment strategies such as short selling, entering into futures, swaps and other derivative contracts and leverage.

As the name implies, hedge funds often seek to offset potential losses in the principal markets they invest in by hedging their investments using a variety of methods, most notably short selling. However, the term "hedge fund" has come in modern parlance to be applied to many funds that do not actually hedge their investments, and in particular to funds using short selling and other "hedging" methods to increase risk, and therefore return, rather than reduce it.
Hedge funds have acquired a reputation for secrecy. Being outside the regulatory regime that applies to retail funds greatly reduces the information a hedge fund is legally required to make public. Additionally, divulging trading methods and positions would compromise the business interests of many types of hedge fund, tending to limit the information they want to release.

The assets under management of a hedge fund can run into many billions of dollars, and this will usually be multiplied by leverage. Their sway over markets, whether they succeed or fail, is therefore potentially substantial and there is a continuing debate over whether they should be more thoroughly regulated..

Strategies

Hedge funds employ many different trading strategies, which are classified in many different ways, with no standard system used. Each strategy can be said to be built from a number of different elements:
  • Style: global macro, directional, event driven, relative value (arbitrage), managed futures (CTA)
  • Market: equity, fixed income, commodity, currency
  • Instrument: long/short, futures, options
  • Exposure: directional, market neutral
  • Sector: emerging market, technology, healthcare etc.
  • Method: discretionary/qualitative (where the individual investments are selected by managers), systematic/quantitative (or "quant" - where the investments are selected according to numerical methods using a computerized system)
  • Diversification: multi manager, multi strategy, multi fund, multi market

The four main strategy groups are based on the investment style and have their own risk and return characteristics. The most common label for a hedge fund is "long/short equity", meaning that the fund takes both long and short positions in shares traded on public stock exchanges.

About Unit Trust Fund

A unit trust is a form of collective investment constituted under a trust deed. Unit trusts offer access to wide range of securities for all types of investors.

Unit trusts are open-ended investments; therefore the underlying value of the assets is always directly represented by the total number of units issued multiplied by the unit price less the transaction or management fee charged and any other associated costs. Each fund has a specified investment objective to determine the management aims and limitations.

Advantages

Diversity and risk

One of the main advantages of collective investment is the reduction in investment risk by diversification. An investment in a single equity may do well, but it may collapse for investment or other reasons. If your money is invested in such a failed holding you could lose your capital. By investing in a range of equities (or other securities) the capital risk is reduced.

The more diversified your capital, the lower the capital risk.

This investment principle is often referred to as spreading risk.

Collective investments by their nature tend to invest in a range of individual securities. However, if the securities are all in a similar type of asset class or market sector then there is a systematic risk that all the shares could be affected by adverse market changes. To avoid this systematic risk investment managers may diversify into different non-perfectly-correlated asset classes. For example, investors might hold their assets in equal parts in equities and fixed income securities.

Reduced dealing costs

If one investor were to buy a large number of direct investments, the amount they would be able to invest in each holding is likely to be small. Dealing costs are normally based on the number and size of each transaction, therefore the overall dealing costs would take a large chunk out of the capital (affecting future profits). Pooling money with that of other investors gives the advantage of buying in bulk, making dealing costs an insignificant part of the investment.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Retirement Planning

One of the major components of the personal financial planning process is Retirement Planning. After all, we all want to have enough money so that we can retire comfortably and not all of us will win the lottery. In addition to having enough money to be able to retire, many of us also want to retire early. However, children, vacations, cars, houses and food require current uses of our resources that may otherwise be available for our "golden years". Also, retirement seems so distant that we tend not to focus on saving for retirement. We opt to utilize our available resources now instead of saving and investing for retirement.

In this section, we hope to highlight issues that will help you gain some insight into the retirement planning process.

Be relaxed, it's not that difficult to understand and time consuming.

Let me introduce you some simple but very useful tools to help you plan for your retirement.

  1. How much do I need for retirement?

    Factors to consider: When to retire, Life style in "golden years", Return rate of money.

    E.g. Retire at age 60, Expected longevity to age 84, $2000/mth expenses in today's value of money, assume rate of return is 4% and inflation rate is 3%, means you need to accumulate $500,000 at age 60.

    There is a trade off between these factors, use this tool for a clear illustration: http://www.advisortek.com/free_tools/calcs/Money_Last.swf


  2. How much do I need to save regularly to achieve that amount?

    Factors to consider: Current age, Return rate of money.

    E.g. Current age 30, retire at age 60, save money in bank, earn a 1.5% interest rate, you need to set aside $1,110/mth.

    There is also trade off between factors, e.g. instead of put money in bank, you can do investment for a average return 6% ~ 8%. In this case, you probably only need to set aside $450/mth to achieve the same goal.

    Use this tool for a clear illustration:
    http://www.advisortek.com/free_tools/calcs/Triangle_Wealth.swf

For questions regarding investment return and investment options, please refer to another article of me on Investment Planning.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

A Guide to Getting Advice

What is Financial Planning

Financial Planning, is managing your finances to meet your lifestyle goals.

Do you know that if you are one of the many Singaporeans who depend solely on your CPF for retirement, you can look forward to a retirement income of only $750 or less?

As a result of heightened interest and awareness, there is now a profusion financial instruments and services in the market to help consumers attain their lifestyle objectives.

With increased choice, however, the possibility of leaving your hard earned money in the wrong places becomes greater.

A good financial plan provides direction and meaning to your financial decisions.

To use a simple analogy, financial planning is akin to planning a long and distant road trip. There are numerous decisions that need to be made and factors to consider before you embark on the journey. Even when your journey has started, you might realize that, sometimes, even the best-made plans need to be changed mid-journey due to changing circumstances.

Financial planning is similar except the stakes are much higher, the journey is much longer and the consequences of poor planning is much direr.

Do I Need Advice?

It really depends on your unique situation.

With the wealth of information available on the Internet, it has now become more feasible for individuals to independently manage their own finances.

However, making quality financial decisions requires both an ample commitment to learn and research, coupled with a great dose of self-discipline. And even though the Internet provides a rich source of information, the sheer amount of information available can be overwhelming for a layperson. It takes a certain level of financial knowledge to make sense of the industry jargon, terminologies, concepts and methodologies.

Ultimately, the question is not whether you need advice per se.

Rather, the question is whether you have the necessary expertise and time to do your own financial planning.

If the answer is No to either, it is wise and important to get sound advice from professionals.

These professionals will:

  • objectively assess your financial circumstances
  • advise you on how to achieve your lifestyle goals, and
  • manage your finances and allow your money to grow for the future whilst ensuring you and your families are financially protected

Where Do I Get Advice?

Whether you are planning for early retirement, saving up for you children's university fees or aiming to ensure that you and your family are adequately protected, rest assured that there are trained professionals who have spent their careers serving many others with the same concerns.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) regulates persons who provide financial advice to consumers under the Financial Advisers Act (FAA). The term Financial Adviser (FA) refers to a corporation, and the individual who provide advice if referred to as Financial Adviser Representative (FAR).

They can be generally grouped under 3 categories, based on the types of advice they can provide:

  1. Tied Advice
    This refers to a representative of a life-insurance company. Insurance agent can only represent and recommend products from one life-insurance company.
  2. Multi-tied Advice
    As the term implies, multi-tied advice relates to the existence of an arrangement between the FA and more than one product provider. Banks typically have the agreements to distribute the products of a single insurance company and a limited number of fund managers.
  3. Independent Advice
    The term "independent" refers to the advisers' independence from commercial links with product providers which may influence their recommendations to consumers. The guidelines of the use of term "Independent Financial Adviser" (IFA) allow consumers the confidence in knowing that the Financial Adviser operates objectively and impartially, and is free from product bias. Among the requirements is the need for an IFA to provide and advise on the products of at least four product providers.