Executive summary:
- Using model strategies as part of your practice is a lot like hiring a running coach to prepare for a marathon. Both allow you to focus on maximizing your efficiency.
- Model strategies can offer an advisor time, choice and confidence.
- Outsourcing investment management through model strategies allows advisors to give their clients more personalized services
Over nearly three decades, I’ve been dedicated to the sport of running. For the last five years, I chased the elusive goal of qualifying for the Boston Marathon, my ultimate aspiration. It wasn’t until I sought the expertise of a professional coach that I finally achieved this dream. Having a customized plan tailored precisely to my needs was a game-changer!
My coach not only held me accountable but also helped me identify my weaknesses and provided invaluable perspective. This support allowed me to channel my energy into the quality of my training.
The decision to hire a coach liberated me to focus on what truly mattered: refining my skills, maximizing my efficiency, and spending precious time with my family. Engaging a professional dedicated solely to enhancing my running speed proved to be the pivotal step I needed to transform my ambition into reality.
What matters most to you?
In today’s fast-paced financial landscape, financial advisors are constantly seeking ways to enhance their services, streamline their processes, and create meaningful connections with their clients. Like me with my dreams of running a marathon.
And, like me deciding to hire a coach, more and more advisors are seeking outside expertise to manage client portfolios. They are turning to professional model investment strategies, which have gained enormous momentum in the past few years.
Model strategies can help free up an advisor’s time for what truly matters: understanding their clients’ needs, goals and circumstances, helping their clients navigate changing life circumstances and ultimately helping them achieve the equivalent of running in the Boston Marathon: reaching their financial goals.
The Morningstar Direct database now includes more than 2,000 models, mostly from the separately managed account database, which currently holds more than 16,000 vehicles. It also estimates that $315 billion was invested in third-party model portfolios in 20221.
From what I have seen in my time at Russell Investments, model strategies can provide advisors with three key advantages when managing their practice:
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Time: By outsourcing certain aspects of portfolio management, model strategies allow advisors to reclaim precious time that can be directed toward client interactions, business growth and personal pursuits.
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Choice: Model portfolios offer a diverse range of options to cater to various client needs, including tax-sensitive strategies, growth and income strategies, or fee-conscious approaches, enabling advisors to select the most suitable combination for their clients.
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Confidence: Advisors can rely on the investment expertise and ongoing professional management that model strategies provide, which can give them the confidence they are delivering value to clients.
Time to focus on what truly matters
Time is an advisor’s scarcest resource.
How can you expand your business while cherishing more of what brings you joy, such as spending time with family and friends or pursuing your hobbies? Whether your aim is to boost the value of your practice or simply sustain its current worth, you will need to create more room in your schedule for acquiring new clients and tending to existing ones. The significance of this cannot be overstated, as the future of your practice hinges on it. Developing and nurturing client relationships is essential to building, growing, and maintaining a business. This goal is unattainable if your entire schedule is consumed by the monitoring of numerous investment products.
We believe implementing professional model strategies saves time, allowing advisors to focus on what they do best: serving their clients. By outsourcing certain aspects of portfolio management, including asset allocation, manager selection, and tax-management, advisors should be able to dedicate more time to building relationships and understanding their clients’ unique needs. This is the true value delivered by financial professionals.
Offering choice that’s scalable and client focused
Model portfolios are effective only when offering the desired level of choice for clients. This choice should also be scalable. Striking the right balance between these factors is optimal. Professional model portfolios offer the advantage of streamlining the advisor workload while still aligning with the investment outcomes that most investors require.
Advisors can select from model portfolios that prioritize growth, solutions that focus on after-tax returns, or portfolios for fee-sensitive clients. And for clients who are retiring from the workforce, there are professionally managed income models that offer a greater emphasis on yield for their retirement years.
What holds true significance for you?
Regardless of the answer, adopting professional model investment strategies can help free up time, allowing for engagement in more enjoyable and rewarding activities.
Just as a marathon coach facilitates training, selecting the right asset management firm helps with the ongoing and proactive management of these models. This approach allows advisors to focus on and seize potential growth opportunities while effectively managing the investment risks delivered by today’s capital markets. Remember, it’s not solely about the investment models themselves; it’s the client relationships established and the comprehensive financial guidance offered to clients that truly make the difference.
Confidently making the transition: Discovering the true value of Advisor-Client relationships
Worried that using model strategies will cause your clients to doubt your ability as an advisor? Let me tell you a story.
The advisor recently made the transition to a professional model provider. When she informed her clients about this change, she was on the verge of tears, overwhelmed by the emotions connected to the effort previously invested in building and maintaining her own investment models. However, the clients’ reaction was not what she anticipated: they simply agreed and moved forward. This turn of events surprised the advisor since her team had dedicated their passion and energy into creating what she believed was a substantial value-add for her clients.
The advisor learned a valuable lesson from this experience: her clients cherished the relationship and the guidance she offered more than the investments she chose. It underscored the importance of allocating more time to clients and less to managing hundreds of individual mutual funds.
The process of evaluating and managing investments and products consumes both time and resources. Most advisors don’t have the time or resources to do this properly and maintain the level of service desired by most clients.
1 Source: WealthAdvisor, 2024 Model Portfolio and SMA Strategists guidebook
Disclosures
These views are subject to change at any time based upon market or other conditions and are current as of the date at the top of the page. The information, analysis, and opinions expressed herein are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual or entity.
This material is not an offer, solicitation or recommendation to purchase any security.
Forecasting represents predictions of market prices and/or volume patterns utilizing varying analytical data. It is not representative of a projection of the stock market, or of any specific investment.
Nothing contained in this material is intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice, nor an opinion regarding the appropriateness of any investment. The general information contained in this publication should not be acted upon without obtaining specific legal, tax and investment advice from a licensed professional.
Please remember that all investments carry some level of risk, including the potential loss of principal invested. They do not typically grow at an even rate of return and may experience negative growth. As with any type of portfolio structuring, attempting to reduce risk and increase return could, at certain times, unintentionally reduce returns.
Frank Russell Company is the owner of the Russell trademarks contained in this material and all trademark rights related to the Russell trademarks, which the members of the Russell Investments group of companies are permitted to use under license from Frank Russell Company. The members of the Russell Investments group of companies are not affiliated in any manner with Frank Russell Company or any entity operating under the "FTSE RUSSELL" brand.
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