23 - Fee-Based Accts Flashcards
What type of account has a licensed portfolio manager decide and execute investment decisions on behalf of their clients?
Managed accounts
What are 4 reasons for the shift to fee-based accounts?
- Commission-based = focus on trading
- Fee linked to portfolio performance
- Clear disclosure (fees are transparent)
- More confidence in advisor
What are 5 disadvantages of fee-based accounts?
- Potentially more expensive
- Limited # of trades (sometimes)
- Neglect by the IA
- Extra fees charged (eg MFs)
- Trading & research time req’d
What is the diff between managed and discretionary accounts?
Managed is ongoing while discretionary is for a shorter period of time (e.g. Illness or out of country)
How must discretionary authority be given?
- In writing by the client
- and accepted in writing by a partner or director (must specify investment objective)
- May not be solicited (managed accts can be)
What are three types of managed account?
- Single-manager
- Multi-manager
- Private Family Office
What is a model portfolio and how is it used?
A mix of securities that a manager uses as a baseline for managed accounts. They then execute trades based on a client’s specific needs.
What are three types of single-manager accounts?
- Advisor or Investment Counsellor
- Proprietary Managed Program
- ETF Wraps
What is a proprietary managed program?
A centralized investment management service that a firm provides to its advisors that has a list of model portfolios to choose from.
What is an ETF wrap and what are the two types of approaches?
A basket of ETFs held in a managed account.
- Passive
- Active (tactically adjust sector weighting a to take advantage of the market)
What are 5 roles of an overlay manager?
- Conduct ongoing due diligence of sub-advisors
- Sets overall asset mix
- Ongoing monitoring of client’s investments
- Coordinates sub-advisors
- Provides market insight to sub-advisors
What are mutual fund wraps?
A multi-manager account that holds a variety of mutual funds as directed by an overlay manager (and several sub-advisors).
If a client has $150k to $500k what additional option do they have for their account type?
Separately managed accounts - where multiple sub-advisors each control their own sub account.
How do multi-disciplinary accounts differ from separately managed accounts?
They take separate models and decisions by sub-advisors and combine them all into one single account.
How does a unified managed account differ from a multi-disciplinary account?
Additional reporting on sub-advisor performance by organizing the account into “sleeves”.