Wealth
Wealth
The amount you should pay for your wealth management is determined by your ability to analyze the various cost factors (as we did in our previous articles on pricing models and hidden costs of wealth management) and your willingness to pressurize your wealth manager. Research shows that your total costs of wealth management in most cases should not exceed 1% of your total assets per year. It is time well spent to understand each cost driver, because you find out what levers you have and how you can cut costs without hurting performance. This self-training is even more important since the market is not very transparent. Without a deeper knowledge of the different pricing models as well as hidden costs, it will be very difficult for you to compare offers and select the best one for your needs. To optimize your total costs of wealth management, you should follow six major steps no matter whether you are a first time investor with your wealth manager, or already have a wealth manager and want to check and renegotiate the fees.
Category II
Category II pertains to mutual fund schemes which invest in nonequity and non-liquid funds, such as Monthly Income Plan (MIP), Fixed Maturity Plan (FMP), short-term debt funds, long-term debt funds (that includes gilt, fund of fund-debt or any other debt oriented non-liquid non-equity schemes). Under this category, for investment transactions through RIS Online, transaction fee will be levied at 0.5% of the transaction amount.
Switch transactions:
No charges will be applicable for switch transactions between mutual fund schemes within the same asset class* of an AMC. Mutual fund transaction charges shall apply as per Table-I for switch transactions between the mutual fund schemes of different asset classes** of an AMC.
Example: Mr. Kumar holds MF investments through the Bank. In January 201x Mr. Kumar books a SIP of `10,000 per month in an equity fund for 36 months. His MF AuM through the Bank during January 201x is `21,00,000.
Mutual funds
When investing in a mutual fund the client has to pay an annual management fee (deducted from the invested assets), and often also a front-load fee, for buying the fund. Some funds charge an additional performance fee. A first indication about the costs of a fund is given with the Total Expense Ratio (TER) as published in the fund prospect. On average, the TER of a mutual fund is between 1% to 2% a year. The one-time front load surcharge can run up to 5% of the initial investment amount.
Hedge funds
Hedge funds have a lot of freedom in investment decisions, and also for calculating their costs. Usually the management fee is between 1.5% to 2.5% per year, significantly higher than for mutual funds. Additionally, hedge funds often charge a performance fee of on average 15% to 20% on the yearly returns as long as the performance is above the highest performance ever achieved in previous years (High Water Mark). Many times the wealth managers offer their clients Funds of hedge funds to diversify their risk. However, for this vehicle the client has to pay additional management fees and performance fees to the manager of the fund of funds. Hereby Funds of hedge funds can cost the client up to 5% and more per year.
Structured products
In recent years, structured products have been heavily pushed by their issuers and wealth managers. Firstly, because the issuer can usually combine a direct investment in an asset class with a derivative, and then set the price himself. This makes it very difficult for an outsider to calculate the margin and easy for the issuer to hide high costs.
Secondly, because investors are easily lured by the promise of achieving above average returns at a lower risk than with direct investments. However, research shows that this is not the case overall. Rather, simple structured products still have total costs in the range of 2%-3% per year. These can easily go up to 4% and more annually when some extra features are added to the product.
Unnecessary transactions
In a pricing model based on transaction-fees, the total cost of wealth management obviously depends on the amount of transactions executed within the clients portfolio. However, not all transactions are required. As long as you are not a trader, a high churn-rate in your portfolio is not only generating transaction fees but in fact can hurt your performance. If your wealth manager is not one of the rare successful stock pickers, you should invest in an ETF rather than investing in many single stocks.
High spreads
The price for buying or selling a stock, bond, fund, currency etc. will always differ. The difference mainly depends on how liquid the market is, meaning how many buyers and sellers exist for the asset at a given moment. The difference between the price for buying and selling is called spread, and high spreads will cause extra costs of up to 3% of the transaction volume. Wealth managers can reduce these costs by trading in liquid markets (exchanges with a lot of buying/ selling volume) dealing in liquid products.
They can also bundle transactions, such as combining currency exchanges from various clients. In this way, a wealth manager can get a better rate from the bank.