Why US funds can drive harder fee bargains

Many US fund sponsors believe they have not received fair value for the fees they paid to investment managers in recent years, a survey by Callan Associates found.



In 2006, 71 per cent of sponsors surveyed by Callan felt the investment management fees they paid were justified, and 47 per cent thought fees across the industry were justified. Now, only 50 per cent feel their fees are justified, and 33 per cent perceive industry-wide fees as fair, Callan’s 2009 Investment Management Fee Survey found.

But sponsors are not intensifying their fee bargaining with managers across all asset classes. Consistent with Callan’s 2006 findings, sponsors negotiate fees with 66 per cent of their managers on average. Most of these negotiations pertained to US large cap equity and core fixed income products. Here, alternatives managers are notably absent. In response, 80 per cent of managers change their fee structures every two to four years. But 20 per cent of respondents never change their published fees. But their investors’ vigilance of fee levels is also not exhaustive.

While 31 per cent of sponsors review fees each year, 17 per cent never do, even though manager fees account for up to 88 per cent of sponsors’ cost of doing business. When negotiations take place, about one third of managers award a “relationship discount” to clients who invest in multiple products, in the form of a reduction of the sum of all individual fees. Despite an increase in the published fees for actively managed US large cap, small cap and non-US equities products for larger accounts, the actual fees paid for these products has declined for larger accounts since 2006.

While published fees declined for US broad market fixed income strategies, the actual fees paid remained flat. For managers, fee revenue has gradually fallen from a 2006 peak of between 21 per cent and 30 per cent. In 2008, revenue dropped to levels below those seen in the 2002 bear market, and will likely decline further. Managers estimate their year-over-year fee revenue will fall in 2009 to between -10 per cent and -20 per cent. Pre-tax profits, which were also between 21 per cent and 30 per cent from 2005 to 2008, are expected to fall below 20 per cent in 2009.

Sponsored Content

But fund sponsors have never been fully aware of the fee revenues they sustained for managers, generally perceiving that managers typically earn between 10 per cent and 20 per cent less than they really make. In the next 18 months, sponsors aim to consolidate the number of managers they employ for their small, mid and large cap US equities and US core plus fixed income, but intend to hire more managers to run global and non-US equities, other types of fixed income, real estate, private equity and hedge funds.

Among sponsors and managers, performance-based fees are becoming more popular as an alternative to standard fee structures, with 59 per cent of fund sponsors using performance-based fees for at least one account and 64 per cent of managers offering them. Such alignment of performance with payoffs addressed some major fee concerns held by sponsors: that active managers delivered enough value to warrant their expense, and that fee structures used for alternatives were reasonable and aligned with fund goals.

Otherwise, investors seek to know whether the fees they pay are competitive with the marketplace. Meantime, managers are worried about fee and margin compression (particularly since asset levels have fallen while operational costs have increased), the consistency of fees given “most favoured nation” agreements, and the competitive pressure from cheaper replication strategies.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Make the most of your funds managers

Access to investment smarts and better fee alignment are just some of the benefits institutional investors can gain through their mandates with funds managers, says Craig Baker, global head of manager research with Towers Watson.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Conservative overweighting hinders world’s largest investor

An overweight allocation to domestic bonds has not helped the world’s largest investor in the June quarter, with a massive $42 billion shaved off the assets of the ¥116,802 billion ($1.37 trillion), Government Pension Investment Fund of Japan (GPIF).mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Deflation: the taboo which needs to be examined

The funds management industry is famous for its navel-gazing. After a crisis, you can just imagine how much of it goes on. But, perhaps, that self-examination may provide more rewards if it starts to actually look at industry taboos rather than accepted practices.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

European pension funds have blinkered view of risk

The liability-hedging portfolio of European pension funds is imprecisely modelled at nearly half of the pension funds as measured in a EDHEC-Risk Institute survey.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Financial health reports essential says Mercer

After the damage of the global financial crisis, funds should be submitting themselves for voluntary financial health checks to diagnose vulnerabilities and pinpoint risks, asset consulting firm Mercer says.  mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Liquidity as an investment style

This paper by Yale School of Management Professors, Roger Ibbotson and Zhiwu Chen, shows that liquidity, as measured by stock turnover or trading volume, is an economically significant and distinct investment style, and introduces and examines the performance of several portfolio strategies.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous