Size and scalability up, fees down

The world’s largest asset managers should be using the advantages of their size and scalability to adjust their fee structures, according to Craig Baker, the global head of manager research at Towers Watson, which just released this year’s Pensions & Investments/Towers Watson World 500.

“The advantage of large managers is [that] they could structure their fees to be more advantageous,” Baker says. “They should decrease fees as their asset size goes up. This should be an advantage of being a large asset manager.”

He says manager charges should be specific to a particular investment strategy with a distinction of how much it costs to run that strategy divided across the client base, and then a performance fee charged on top of that.

“The way fee structures work in this industry is that everyone charges the same, which doesn’t really work.”

How they lined up

According to the World 500, Blackrock remains the world’s largest funds manager by assets under management, with $3.512 trillion, followed by Allianz Group, State Street Global Advisors, Vanguard and Fidelity Investments.

Sponsored Content

The total in assets under management by the 500 managers was down 2.5 per cent for the year to $63 trillion.

Baker says market or beta movement accounts for a lot of the fall, as well as the fact equities markets fell compared with bond markets, and there was less merger-and-acquisition activity among the largest managers globally.

The top 20 managers make up about 40 per cent of the total.

United States managers dominate the list, with about half of the total assets. Further, the US managers in the top 20 managed about 64 per cent of that group’s assets.

From 2006 to 2011 the fastest growing managers globally have been Great-West Lifeco from Canada, Nippon Life Insurance from Japan and Wells Fargo from the US.

Baker is now head of investment research across Towers Watson, as well as head of investment research. This means the Thinking Ahead Group and the asset research team also report to him, which he says allows for coordination across research themes, ideas and implementation.

At Towers Watson those themes include sustainability, smart beta, and risk and governance.

Baker says the asset research group has a view that most government bonds are very expensive.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Experts mull strategies in slow growth climate

Speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Oxford University’s Rhodes House Fiona Trafford-Walker, director of consulting at Frontier Advisors argues that Australian investors are operating in a changed environment and need to “get used to slower economic growth.” Speaking as part of an expert panel on how the continued environment of slow growth and low

Macro diversification: How do investors diversify risk?

“Geopolitics does matter and how to navigate geopolitical events on a portfolio is challenging,” argues Tom Clarke, partner and portfolio manager at William Blair speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Rhodes House, Oxford University. In a session dedicated to macro strategies for investors to best navigate today’s complex investment universe and diversify risk, Clarke argues that “hiding” from

Oxford Professor urges urgent European reform

The University of Oxford’s distinguished Professor of Economics David Vines predicted the ongoing crisis in Europe will turn into a “train wreck with implications for investors” unless governments undertake significant reforms. He urges for large write downs of the sovereign debt of southern European countries, a loosening of austerity in those countries and a significant

Indexing pressure improves active management

A new study of active and indexed-based mutual funds shows the impact of different countries’ regulatory and financial market environments. The study finds that the average alpha generated by active management is higher in countries with more explicit indexing and lower in countries with more closet indexing. The evidence suggests that explicit indexing improves competition in the mutual fund

Investors need to revamp portfolio construction

Investors should re-consider their investment processes in order to achieve the needed “step-change in efficient portfolio construction” in a low return environment, the chief executive of the A$109 billion ($83 billion) Future Fund, David Neal, says. “It is the investment process that turns the universe of opportunities into a portfolio, and right now that process

Investors need to rethink operating model

A neat little story of investment flows, asset allocation changes, and relationship and service demands is emerging from the third annual Top1000funds.com/Casey Quirk Global Fiduciary CIO Survey. If you’re a CIO of an asset owner what that means is more control but also more responsibilities and the demands of more internal resources. For managers it

Previous