New push has U.K. money management firms looking hard at their businesses
Skip to main content
pilogo-NEW
Subscribe
  • Subscribe
  • My Account
  • login
  • NEWS
    • Asset owners and the coronavirus
    • Alternatives
    • Consultants
    • Coronavirus
    • Defined Contribution
    • ESG
    • Frontlines
    • Hedge Funds
    • Investing / Portfolio Strategies
    • Money Management
    • Pension Funds
    • People Moves
    • Private Equity
    • Real Estate
    • Searches & Hires News
    • SECURE Act
    • Special Reports
    • WorldPensionSummit
    • Ron Schmitz
      Pandemic drives faster transition for Virginia to private markets
      Mubadala Investment Co. logo
      Mubadala draws on portfolio in coronavirus fight
      T.J. Carlson
      Texas Muni reduces downside risk during pandemic, finding opportunities now
      Scott Davis
      ‘Triage plan’ at Indiana system helped stem losses
    • H.I.G. raises $1.4 billion for latest credit fund
      James Zelter
      Private credit managers supersizing their loans
      Deborah Pederson and David J. Rothenberg
      Arena hires 3 to boost global marketing of private credit strategies
      BentallGreenOak agrees to acquire Metropolitan Real Estate Equity
    • Kieran Mistry
      Hymans Robertson picks head for new non-traditional risk transfer unit
      Troy Saharic
      NEPC brings on director of new business development
      Bill Foley
      Foley-backed SPAC agrees to $7.3 billion deal with Alight
      Jason Schwarz, chief operating officer of Wilshire,
      New owners have big plans for future of Wilshire
    • An American flag flies at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on March 6, 2021
      House expected to pass COVID-19 relief bill with multiemployer aid
      watch video
      5:39
      The coronavirus pandemic: One year later
      Gary Paulin
      Outsourced trading becoming side effect of virus for managers
      Logistics becomes shining star of investing during virus crisis
    • David Blanchett
      Morningstar says women build better DC plans
      Morningstar turns detective to find gender from 5500s
      Desktop with document showing pie chart with investment types along with a calculator
      OECD proposes revision of its DC ‘good design’ roadmap
      Dominic Scriven, director and portfolio manger of Dragon Capital, speaks during an interview in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam in 2006
      Vietnam gets its first private defined contribution plan
    • Preqin: Alts industry showing some progress on gender equality
      The tower of Stockholm City Hall rise above the city's skyline on Aug. 6, 2020
      Swedish funds managing $250 billion get slammed for ESG record
      Vapor rises from a petrochemical plant
      New York State Common inks more climate pacts
      Michael Herskovich
      BNP Paribas Asset Management names global head of stewardship
    • University of Washington/University of Minnesota
      Parametric creates quantitative fellowships for diverse students
      Roger Ferguson
      Finance museum honors TIAA's Roger Ferguson
      ERISA attorneys are taken to task by federal judge
      Springboard illustration
      LGPS Central execs to mentor U.K. students
    • Robert 'Rob' Shafir listens during a Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations hearing in Washington on Feb. 26, 2014
      Sculptor hedge fund hits sixth straight year of outflows
      The WallStreetBets forum on the Reddit Inc. website on a laptop computer and the GameStop logo on a smartphone in an arranged photo.
      GameStop frenzy has hedge fund managers rethinking next moves
      Gabe Plotkin, chief investment officer and portfolio manager of Melvin Capital Management, speaks during the Sohn Investment Conference in New York on May 6, 2019
      Citadel, Point72 back Melvin with $2.75 billion after losses
      Shanghai skyline
      Global hedge funds struggle even in a more open China market
    • Dallas-Fort Worth Airport lands $23 million in 3 alts funds
      A logo outside the Greensill Bank offices in Bremen, Germany, on March 3, 2021
      Greensill files for U.K. administration after swift unraveling
      MiFID II prompts 7,500 years of lost analyst experience
      Marc Rowan, co-founder of Apollo Global Management, speaks at the annual Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, Calif., on April 29, 2014
      Apollo-Athene merger billed as ‘natural progression’
    • JPMAM lights up Project Spark to invest in diverse alts managers
      Marc Rowan, co-founder of Apollo Global Management, speaks at the annual Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, Calif., on April 29, 2014
      Apollo-Athene merger billed as ‘natural progression’
      Andrew Morrison
      Janus Henderson chooses global head of client experience
      Jim Wiant
      Denmark’s Capital Four picks CEO to establish U.S. presence
    • NISA Pension Surplus Risk index inches up in February
      CalSTRS adds alts investments to ESG-themed portfolio
      District of Columbia Retirement Board executive director to retire
      Police car in the city of San Antonio
      San Antonio fund terminates Lazard from emerging markets strategy
    • Andrew Morrison
      Janus Henderson chooses global head of client experience
      Jim Wiant
      Denmark’s Capital Four picks CEO to establish U.S. presence
      Edwina Ho
      Cambridge Associates selects senior director for new Hong Kong office
      District of Columbia Retirement Board executive director to retire
    • The Charging Bull statue is covered in snow near the New York Stock Exchange on Feb. 11, 2021
      Bain: Private equity managers finish 2020 strong
      Carlyle secures $4.1 billion ESG-related credit facility
      Hamilton Lane raises $3.9 billion for fifth secondary fund
      PSG closes first Europe-focused fund at $1.5 billion
    • AEW chooses head of fund operations and debt finance
      Sebastiano Ferrante and Jocelyn de Verdelon
      PGIM Real Estate turns to staff to fill new roles
      European managers key in on specialist strategies
      Ingrid Jacobs
      Jones Lang LaSalle brings on head of diversity and inclusion
    • Jackie Walorski
      Contribution catch-up for caregivers gaining favor
      Neal and Brady
      Retirement security could be only issue both sides accept
      Retirement cartoon
      Hopes rising for retirement readiness in 2021
      Shawn O'Brien
      Annuities coming to target-date funds, but not right away
    • COVID-19: One year in
      Charging Bull, sometimes referred to as the Wall Street Bull or the Bowling Green Bull, a bronze sculpture that stands on Broadway just north of Bowling Green in the Financial District of New York City
      Top-performing managers Q4 2020
      P&I 1,000 largest retirement plans: 2021
      Retirement in emerging markets
    • U.S. still a key market for investors
      Collected coverage of P&I's 2020 WorldPensionSummit
      Pedestrians pass a large advertisement on the Arndale Center shopping mall reading 'Act now to avoid a local lockdown' in Manchester, England
      COVID-19 puts new opportunities and risks on the agenda - WPS panelists
      Screens display stock price information over the trading floor of the NYSE Euronext exchange in Paris
      Private assets will continue to grow in portfolios – WPS panelists
  • Data
    • Research Center
    • Searches & Hires Database
    • Searches & Hires News
    • RFPs
    • Charts / Infographics
    • Sponsored Research
    • Trackers
    • Q2 2020 searches and hires overview report
      Q2 2020 money manager M&A activity summary
      Q2 2020 legal overview report
      Q1 2020 searches and hires overview report
    • Dallas-Fort Worth Airport lands $23 million in 3 alts funds
      Enerpac Tool taps Fidelity as record keeper for 401(k) plan
      Fairfax schools seeks record keepers for 403(b), 457 plans
      CalPERS discloses $5.7 billion in commitments
    • Dallas-Fort Worth Airport lands $23 million in 3 alts funds
      Enerpac Tool taps Fidelity as record keeper for 401(k) plan
      Fairfax schools seeks record keepers for 403(b), 457 plans
      CalPERS discloses $5.7 billion in commitments
    • Emerging Markets Debt Mandate
      Emerging Markets Equity Mandate
      Investment Consultant
      Independent Investment Consulting Services
    • Taiwan Semiconductor’s No. 1 in the emerging markets book
      U.S. fixed-income returns post another positive year
      Nasdaq delivers an impressive year
      U.S. dollar's recent decline continues
    • Institutional Investors: Shared Expectations, Divergent Paths
      Global Investor Study 2016
      Workplace Financial Wellness
    • U.S. Endowment Returns Tracker
      Pension Fund Returns Tracker
      Earnings Tracker
      Corporate Pension Contribution Tracker
  • Insights
    • Opinion
    • White Papers
    • Industry Voices
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Partner Content
    • Publisher's Update
    • Vaccination cartoon
      Rallying to meet the ongoing COVID-19 challenge
      Tesla cartoon
      Don’t confuse wealth creation with retirement saving
      Top 1000 cartoon
      Top 1,000 retirement plans weather storm just fine
      Infrastructure cartoon
      You must go big on infrastructure, Mr. President
    • Investment Trends: Looking Ahead Across Equity Sectors
      Rethinking Market and Reference Data Management
      China is embarking on a new stage of growth
      Gold Outlook 2021
    • Sameer Shalaby
      Commentary: Why should investors care about treasury management?
      David Blitzstein
      Commentary: Without a national retirement policy, Americans face a future of pension crises
      Lawrence Cunningham
      Commentary: Gensler should keep Clayton’s pragmatic proxy adviser rules
      My-Linh Ngo
      Commentary: Pension funds and the role of the debt market in the fight against climate change
    • Writer using a typewriter
      OCIO industry needs to adopt GIPS
      Writer or journalist workplace. stock illustration
      Even as it assails China, Trump administration emulates it
      Skeptical of Main Street support for proxy adviser proposal
      Focus on manager diversity pushes asset owners’ to walk the talk
    • P&I Content Solutions
      Emerging Markets: Expanding Investors' View
      P&I Content Solutions
      How will gold react?
      To people shaking hands
      P&I Content Solutions
      Lessons From 2020: Today’s OCIO Model Passes a Major Test of Governance
      Sponsored Content By MassMutual
      Leveraging Data to Manage Risk
    • Help us help you by supporting quality journalism
      You Must Believe in Spring
      Everything Must Change
      Tomatoes & Investments
  • Multimedia
    • Videos
    • Webinars
    • Polls
    • Slideshows
    • Charts / Infographics
    • watch video
      5:39
      The coronavirus pandemic: One year later
      watch video
      0:45
      Private funds weathered 2020 turmoil
      watch video
      0:59
      Secure choice and other retirement plans at a state level
      watch video
      3:33
      P&I 1,000 by the numbers 2021
    • Emerging Markets: Expanding Investors’ View
      2021: A Fixed Income Odyssey
      ESG Capabilities and Climate Impact Investing
      Looking Beneath the Headlines – and Below Investment Grade – for Alpha Potential
    • POLL: Working after the pandemic
      POLL: The year ahead for the 1,000 largest U.S. retirement funds
      POLL: The Biden administration’s economic plans
      POLL: Retirement issues in 2021
    • view gallery
      9 photos
      Coronavirus and the markets
      view gallery
      22 photos
      The 1,000 largest retirement funds: 2020
      view gallery
      10 photos
      Outlook 2020
      view gallery
      10 photos
      2019 as seen through the eyes of Roger
    • Graphic: Is it time for DC plans to embrace private equity?
      Tradewatch for Q4 2020
      By the Numbers for February 2021
      Top performing managers by category: commingled accounts, 4th Quarter 2020
  • Events
    • Conferences
    • Webinars
    • Defined Contribution Spring Virtual Series
      DC Investment Lineup Virtual Series
      ESG Investing Virtual Series
      Private Markets Virtual Series
    • Emerging Markets: Expanding Investors’ View
      2021: A Fixed Income Odyssey
      ESG Capabilities and Climate Impact Investing
      Looking Beneath the Headlines – and Below Investment Grade – for Alpha Potential
  • Careers
  • Research Center
MENU
Breadcrumb
  1. Home
  2. Regulation
February 10, 2020 12:00 AM

New push has U.K. firms looking hard at their businesses

Paulina Pielichata
  • Tweet
  • Share
  • Share
  • Email
  • More
    Reprints Print
    Steve Kenny
    Steve Kenny thinks the FCA wants to force firms to make things easier to understand.

    A new effort by the U.K.'s financial services watchdog to ensure that money managers are delivering value to their institutional and retail investors is prompting firms to inspect the performance of funds and look to consolidate offerings to achieve greater scale.

    Some sources said more intense scrutiny from the Financial Conduct Authority in the first half of 2020 could lead more managers to consider shutting down strategies with similar objectives and trimming performance and annual management fees as well as third-party expenses such as audit costs.

    The FCA wrote to the CEOs of money management firms operating in the U.K. on Jan. 20, urging them to change fee structures and investment strategies that are not benefiting investors.

    Wanting to see firms effectively and regularly assess their offerings, the FCA will seek confirmation that boards challenged senior executives to improve outcomes for investors. "We will seek evidence of meaningful challenge at authorized fund managers' boards on proposals made by the executive — including on costs, fees and product design," the FCA said in the letter.

    The letter stems from the regulator's earlier investigation into the business of money managers — the Asset Management Market Study, which in 2017 concluded that U.K. investors could receive better value for money from their managers.

    As a result of that study, firms have been required since Feb. 4, 2019, by the FCA to review their funds' performance objectives and, since Sept. 30, state on their websites through an annual value assessment report how they contribute to their investors' goals. Firms must publish their value assessment report in their long financial report within four months from the end of the last annual accounting period at the latest.

    Andrew Glessing, head of regulatory compliance at Alpha Financial Markets Consulting PLC in London, who used to supervise money managers at the FCA, said the regulator's move not to prescribe a template for how it wants firms to show value assessment was deliberate. "The FCA doesn't want managers to collude," he said.

    In the first half of 2020, the FCA will be examining managers' efforts to assess if:


    • Their funds' performance was in line with benchmarks.
    • They have been providing investors with quality services.
    • Their funds could benefit from merging.
    • Their fund fees and third-party costs could be reduced.
    • They offered investors rates and services comparable with market rates and services.
    • They adopted fair fee structures for all types of investors.

    Senior exec responsible

    Those responsible for value assessment reports are senior executives appointed by money management firms under the Senior Manager and Certification Regime, a separate U.K. regulation that took effect Dec. 9. The new law, among other rules, has armed the FCA with a power to fine individual directors at money management firms if they failed to show how they have protected their investors' interests.

    Sources said the FCA's push is aimed at leading managers to reduce annual management fees and third-party costs as well as identifying to their investors how well each of their funds is performing. The FCA is particularly targeting managers that sell passive funds disguised as active funds, known as "closet trackers," sources added.

    Steve Kenny, commercial director at Square Mile Investment Consulting & Research Ltd. in London, said the FCA wants to improve how managers are communicating to investors in fund fact sheets because often "funds' objectives in prospectuses are too opaque and they are incomprehensible for investors."

    Mr. Kenny added that with managers having to assess the performance vs. fund objectives, they may start to question if they need six or seven U.K. equity funds. "If you consolidate them into one, the fund costs would come down for investors," he said.

    Mr. Kenny, whose firm was hired to develop a value report for Rathbone Unit Trust Management Ltd., highlighted that the assessment of Rathbone's strategies made the firm identify underperforming funds and make changes to its offering.

    Rathbone, which had £7.4 billion ($9.7 billion) in assets under management as of Dec. 31, said in its value report that "significant resource" had to be invested to address the FCA's value assessment criteria. The manager subsequently switched all of its retail investors into institutional funds, moving investors into a cheaper share class.

    Mike Webb, London-based CEO of Rathbone Unit Trust Management Ltd., said in a telephone interview that the firm identified two funds to be underperforming their respective benchmarks due to significant exposure to U.K. stocks, impacted by the uncertainty resulting from the U.K.'s departure from the European Union.

    One fund, Rathbone Global Alpha Fund, which had AUM of £121 million as of Dec. 31, delivered a 60.19% return over five years through Dec. 31 vs. 62.88% returned by its benchmark. Mr. Webb said the fund's only client chose to terminate Rathbone as a manager, and the fund will close in 2020. He declined to name the client.

    Also, Rathbone U.K. Opportunities Fund, with AUM of £47 million as of Dec. 31, underperformed its benchmark FTSE All-Share index over a three- and five-year period, returning 18.48% and 43.04%, respectively, vs. 22.01% and 43.84% by the index.

    In the value assessment report, the firm said that the U.K. Opportunities Fund fell 19.3% during the fourth quarter of 2018, compared to the FTSE All-Share index's 10.3% fall, noting that the impact on performance will be felt over a five-year period until 2022. Mr. Webb said Rathbone's board decided the U.K. Opportunities Fund annual management fee should be kept at 45 basis points until performance is back on track. The firm relaunched the Rathbone Recovery Fund as U.K. Opportunities Fund and reduced its fee to 45 basis points from 75 basis points in 2017.


    Beyond performance

    Other sources said managers will be focusing on aspects other than performance of the FCA's value assessment criteria.

    For example, Columbia Threadneedle Investments stopped charging performance fees on Jan. 1, 2020, for a number of its funds, including Threadneedle U.K. Absolute Alpha Fund, Threadneedle U.K. Extended Alpha Fund and Threadneedle (Lux) American Extended Alpha."We have decided to stop charging performance fees on the funds as part of our commitment to ensure that our fees are fair, simple and transparent," the firm said on its website.

    After May 7, Columbia Threadneedle will also reduce annual management fees on a mix of five other equity and bond funds due to "commitment to giving the unitholders value for money over the long term," its website said.

    For Mike Zelouf, director of European and Middle East business at Western Asset Management Co. LLC in London, the FCA's requirements should also force active management firms to review the practice of passing costs onto investors from third-party firms such as custodians or auditors. Some firms levy non-management fees as part of total fund charges that investors pay as a percentage of fund's value as opposed to a nominal charge, he said.

    Sources said that overall, firms may struggle to fully disclose to would-be investors what rates are paid by existing clients, without being concerned about their future profitability.

    Noting an ongoing discussion among U.K. managers about the degree of fee disclosure, Ingrid Holmes, head of public policy and advocacy at the international business of Federated Hermes Inc. in London, said in a telephone interview money managers may initially set lower fees when launching a new fund to attract assets.

    "When you are launching a new strategy, it can be at a loss," she said by way of example.

    Related Articles
    FCA, Bank of England stipulate deadlines for LIBOR phaseout
    FCA fines Prudential Assurance $29 million over annuity claims
    U.K.'s FCA to address advice standard regarding pension transfers
    FCA warns ESMA rules won't eliminate risk of market disruption in no-deal Brexit
    Recommended for You
    Former regulators ask Congress to address market stability
    Former regulators ask Congress to address market stability
    SEC launches climate task force
    SEC launches climate task force
    SEC exams will focus more heavily on climate risks, Reg BI compliance
    SEC exams will focus more heavily on climate risks, Reg BI compliance
    How will gold react?
    Sponsored Content: How will gold react?
    sponsored
    Events
     
     
    Sponsored
    White Papers
    Rethinking Market and Reference Data Management
    Investment Trends: Looking Ahead Across Equity Sectors
    China is embarking on a new stage of growth
    Gold Outlook 2021
    Shifting DC Times - Winter 2021
    GP-LED OPPORTUNITIES AT THE SMALLER END OF THE MARKET
    View More
    Sponsored Content
    Partner Content
    The Industrialization of ESG Investment
    For institutional investors, ETFs can make meeting liquidity needs easier
    Gold: the most effective commodity investment
    2021 Investment Outlook | Investing Beyond the Pandemic: A Reset for Portfolios
    Ten ways retirement plan professionals add value to plan sponsors
    Gold: an efficient hedge
    View More
    E-MAIL NEWSLETTERS

    Sign up and get the best of News delivered straight to your email inbox, free of charge. Choose your news – we will deliver.

    Subscribe Today

    Get access to the news, research and analysis of events affecting the retirement and institutional money management businesses from a worldwide network of reporters and editors.

    Subscribe
    弊社の関連事業
    • RSS
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn

    P&Iのミッション

    "機関投資家向け市場で資金運用を行う経営者に向けてニュース、リサーチ、分析を継続配信すること”

    pilogo-NEW
    About Us

    Main Office
    685 Third Avenue
    Tenth Floor
    New York, NY 10017-4036

    Chicago Office
    150 N. Michigan Ave.
    Chicago, IL 60601

    Contact Us

    Careers at Crain

    About Pensions & Investments

     

    Advertising
    • Media Kit
    • P&I Content Solutions
    • P&I Careers | Post a Job
    • Reprints & Permissions
    Resources
    • Subscribe
    • Newsletters
    • FAQ
    • P&I Research Center
    • Site map
    • Staff Directory
    Legal
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Request
    Pensions & Investments
    Copyright © 1996-2021. Crain Communications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    • NEWS
      • Asset owners and the coronavirus
      • Alternatives
      • Consultants
      • Coronavirus
      • Defined Contribution
      • ESG
      • Frontlines
      • Hedge Funds
      • Investing / Portfolio Strategies
      • Money Management
      • Pension Funds
      • People Moves
      • Private Equity
      • Real Estate
      • Searches & Hires News
      • SECURE Act
      • Special Reports
      • WorldPensionSummit
    • Data
      • Research Center
      • Searches & Hires Database
      • Searches & Hires News
      • RFPs
      • Charts / Infographics
      • Sponsored Research
      • Trackers
    • Insights
      • Opinion
      • White Papers
      • Industry Voices
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Partner Content
      • Publisher's Update
    • Multimedia
      • Videos
      • Webinars
      • Polls
      • Slideshows
      • Charts / Infographics
    • Events
      • Conferences
      • Webinars
    • Careers
    • Research Center