Wurts polishes its silver

US consulting firm Wurts & Associates turns 25 this year, so Amanda White spoke to the founder, Bill Wurts, and managing director, Jeff MacLean, about the company’s transformation and the plans for the next quarter of a century.

1986 doesn’t seem that long ago, but it is, it’s 25 years. Like fashion, a lot has changed in that time, and just like fashion, a lot has come back around.

Back then, according to Bill Wurts – who before establishing his own firm had a 23-year history working for Merrill Lynch’s institutional division – performance measurement and evaluation were the prevailing consulting service.

While many services have been added to the toolkit since then, those skills are very much in vogue following the financial crisis and the subsequent focus on risk.

What has changed, according to Wurts who celebrates his firm’s 25th anniversary this year, is a dramatic improvement in service, with a wider range of services such as asset/liability modelling and asset allocation, as well as a change in fee models.

“It’s now a more complete consulting service, and a big change from just saying ‘here’s where you rank’, to ‘here’s where the problems are and this is how to solve them’,” Wurts says.

Sponsored Content

Wurts has a diverse range of clients, but most do not have big internal teams so rely on the consultant to make recommendations.

This has been the genesis for the firm to move more towards a discretionary model, and ultimately the development of multi-manager products.

“Every sponsor’s objectives are different, and we want to be able to provide a service for a client that doesn’t want to take the time or expertise to evaluate managers and make investment decisions. On the other hand there are still many Californian counties that want to make their own decisions,” he says.

“We have to have the capability to do more discretionary type services.”

Bill Wurts is still very much involved in the business he set up 25 years ago, and still has some client-facing responsibilities.

“I have a few old-line clients who still like to talk to an old man,” he says.

He still has ambitious plans, saying the company can grow at 20 per cent a year but he has handed over the day-to-day running of the business to Jeff MacLean.

MacLean, who joined Wurts with a plan to move back to his native Seattle but has been in Los Angeles since he joined in 1992, is the majority shareholder and manages the company’s 40-odd staff.

Like Wurts, he believes that implemented consulting will form a big part of the company’s future.

“Trustee boards don’t want to get into every decision of managing a portfolio. It can be very overwhelming for some clients, and they want a consultant to do it,” he says. “It will be a big part of our future.”

He concedes there are other types of clients that it won’t suit, but that the key is to developing and delivering capabilities for both.

The implemented consulting, that was only formed about a year ago, is fully customised to the liabilities of the individual plans, with a judgement about the sponsors’ contribution ability feeding into the funded status, with a subsequent asset allocation model that best matches those liabilities.

While MacLean believes consulting businesses in the US will continue to merge, it will also stay fragmented.

“This will be good for clients as some of the best work is done by key individuals with ownership.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Slavery victims look to financial world

Speaking at the PRI in Person in Paris in a panel to highlight the role of finance in addressing social issues, Ghanaian James Kofi Annan, sold into slavery at the age of six, told his story.

Pizza and diversity: How funds move dial

Empowering long-term influential asset owners to invest responsibly is the key to hastening take-up in responsible investment. Delegates heard how some leading asset owners are doing this through their diversity and ESG practices.

Responsible FI promotes good markets

Responsible investment has assumed an increasingly central role in fixed income portfolios and in the experience of Jørgen Krog Sæbø CIO, fixed income, and Lars Tronsgaard deputy managing director at Folketrygdfondet, which manages the Government Pension Fund Norway, one part of Norway’s Government Pension Fund, adopting a responsible investment focus builds more integrated understanding and deeper insight into companies.

At a glance: FIS Cambridge day three

An overwhelming number of delegates at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium said the funds management industry was not doing well in innovationMartin Gilbert, who started Aberdeen Standard Investments in 1983 and is now chair, said industry participants needed to innovate and disrupt themselves.

Climate change risk to spur stress test

Mercer has quantified a ‘low-carbon transition’ premium in the sequel to its seminal climate change report, showing that a 2⁰C scenario equates to 11 basis points per annum to 2030 in a typical growth portfolio.

ATP’s approach to ESG

The giant Danish fund, ATP, takes a comprehensive approach to ESG including voting and engagement, as well as a large investment in green bonds. Ole Buhl is vice president and head of ESG at ATP explains.

Previous