This blog is part 3 of a three-part series covering the evolution of investment consulting. This blog explores 2006–Present.
By Ron Surz, President, Target Date Solutions, President & CEO, PPCA Inc., CFO, GlidePath Wealth Management
To read Part 1: 1950–1985 click here, for Part 2: 1986–2005 click here.
The consulting industry had an epiphany about 15 years ago that is slowly being integrated into consulting practices. Risk is more complicated than volatility or required return. The epiphany is simple, but very important—age matters. There is a time in everyone’s life when we cannot afford to take risk. Losses sustained during the risk zone spanning the 5–10 years before and after retirement can ruin retirement, even if markets subsequently recover. Target-date funds (TDF) are supposed to provide this protection, although most currently do not. A properly constructed TDF should be no more than 30 percent in risky assets at the target date, but most are more than 80 percent.
A TDF follows a glide path that begins with high risk for young investors and reduces
TDFs were not very popular before the passage of the Pension Protection Act of 2006, which made TDFs a qualified default investment alternative (QDIA) in 401(k) plans. Subsequently TDFs have grown to more than $2.5 trillion. They are the biggest deal in pension plans.
Wade Pfau, PhD, is a professor of retirement income and a director of the New York Life Center for Retirement Income and Michael Kitces is a consulting industry luminary.
Conclusion
A lot has improved in 70 years, but not all consultants have evolved. Investment consulting is a credence good like computer technicians and car mechanics. “Trusted advisors” are usually nice people, but not all are financially skilled with the clients’ best interests at heart. The client is best advised to trust but verify. Consultants are best advised to differentiate through innovation.
To explore additional resources and courses available through the Institute visit, www.investmnetsandwealth.org.
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See a recorded webinar of this history here.
References
Brinson, Gary P., L. Randolph Hood, and Gilbert L. Beebower. 1986. Determinants of Portfolio Performance. Financial Analysts Journal 42, no. 4 (July–August): 39–44.
Haugen, Robert F. 1999. The Inefficient Stock Market: What Pays Off and Why. New York: Prentice Hall
Markowitz, Harry. 1952. Portfolio Selection. Journal of Finance 7, no. 1 (March): 77–91.
Pfau, Wade D., and Michael Kitces. 2013. Reducing Retirement Risk with a Rising Equity Glide-Path (September 12). https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2324930.
Sharpe, William F. 1964. Capital Asset Prices: A Theory of Market Equilibrium under Conditions of Risk. Journal of Finance 19, no. 3 (September): 425–442.
Sortino, Frank A. 2009. The Sortino Framework for Constructing Portfolios: Focusing on Desired Target Return to Optimize Upside Potential Relative to Downside Risk. Elsevier.