After 'a lot of flak' Fidelity Investments does a study and pledges to change how it manages its $170 billion of target date funds
The Boston giant announces findings to justify its surprising embrace of stocks but skeptics say Fidelity is under pressure to conform with rivals T. Rowe Price and Vanguard Group
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Fidelity will hire 4,000 staff in first half -- a staggering number but a tapering off from 'unprecedented' rate in 2021-2022 that catapulted it to 68,000 employees
The $10.3 trillion giant explains its hiring -- in a layoff environment -- as an RIA-like goal, namely having the human bandwidth to develop 'lifetime' relationships with its 40 million investors
February 17, 2023 at 2:49 AM
RIA Quick Takes: Orion deepens DFA embrace by using it as portfolio manager-inside-ETF ~ Hardship withdrawals surge at Vanguard and Fidelity ~ Schwab hires 400 ~ Fidelity flips six funds into ETFs ~ Kitces makes list before Christmas ~ Amit Dogra has $1 billion of good news from his new Portland gig
Americans are struggling, though jobs are plentiful; Larry Fink's ESG zeal costs BlackRock another client, just as the Vatican issues ESG guidance; UBS says we didn't like you anyway to mass affluent and Michael Kitces and Craig Iskowitz join forces.
December 3, 2022 at 3:16 AM
Fidelity Investments loses Kathleen Murphy who largely caught up Fido to Schwab (near $4T) on the retail side by reversing net promoter scores
The 'no whining allowed' leader of the Boston giant's retail business, who oversaw $2 trillion in net new assets, was ready to exit but hung in through a year dominated by COVID-19 challenges
January 23, 2021 at 2:02 AM
Fidelity Institutional looks like a big TAMP after Mike Durbin removes last internal walls between products and advisors after 'meteoric' 2019 leap; two Fido RIA sales legends depart amid the shift
Rich Policastro and Tom Valverde are out after Fidelity Custody & Clearing assets leap to $2.6 trillion AUA, restructuring gets the credit -- and so restructuring gets extended.
March 13, 2020 at 10:36 PM
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Morningstar, Inc.
TAMP
Top Executive: Joe Mansueto
Robert Boslego
According to another report, Fidelity’s Bruce Herring, group chief investment officer of the global asset allocation division, also said their outlook for bonds played a role. I totally agree with that. I think bonds are riskier than stocks for the next 5-10 years and could pose big trouble for retirement portfolios that are heavily invested in bonds.
Philip Chiricotti
Fees are important, but I don’t think they are responsible for the underperformance of Fidelity’s target-date funds.
Net of revenue sharing, their “K” series is quite competitive. Indeed, T. Rowe Price has been on a roll with comparable fees. Also worth noting that the low cost TDFs offered by Vanguard have not topped the charts. They have delivered consistently above average returns, but no chart topping. On a risk/reward basis, TIAA-CREF and American Funds have both bested Vanguard.
As noted by observers, multiple factors are no doubt in play, including forward looking capital market forecasts that indicate shifting risk/return characteristics between equities and fixed income.
Fidelity’s clients have also no doubt noted that their equity allocation was more conservative than the majority of their peers, particularly T. Rowe and Vanguard. Fidelity’s custom benchmark aside, they may have concluded that they needed to change their equity allocation to remain competitive.
Some of their recent asset allocation shifts, particularly in the commodities area, were poorly timed and detracted from their core competency. By increasing their allocation to equities, they are focusing on their key investment strength, the management of active stock funds.
Recoveries are always uneven, but forecasters have consistently under estimated the growth in the U.S. economy. Indeed, the lack of national leadership aside, it is hard not to be bullish on the U.S. economy. The energy transformation is also a huge and generally unrecognized bullish factor. Increasing equity allocations after an extensive bull market run is, however, no walk in the park.
Philip Chiricotti
President
Center for Due Diligence
Brooke Southall
Philip,
This is excellent back story to the back story.
much appreciated,
Brooke
Stephen Winks
Thematically, client outcomes have become far more important than singular investment performance especially with retirement assets for those in retirement with out the time to recover from under performance. Ron Surz’s caution that retiree risk may not be fully appreciated should be heeded. In today’s perilous investment environment where the Quantitative Easing music must eventually stop do we have the discipline in place to mitigate significant market correction?
I hope every Target Date Fund has a mechanism to protect assets should a significant down turn occur, even if it is not fashionable to suggest anything but blue sky.
SCW
Robert Boslego
Stephen,
The cumulative daily returns of the big 3 target date fund families can be nearly replicated by allocations using just 2 ETFs (one stock, one bond) and do not protect assets when prices drop.
The ETF strategies require no thought, if you know what I mean.
Robert
Elmer Rich III
Of course, it’s always best to have independent academic and experimental studies and make the data public for others to analyze – but our industry only really does “research” for sales uses. Ho hum
Independent research says fees are the biggest contributor and Morning start styles, for example are useless.
There will be no progress in finance and investment practices until the “black boxes” are retired and free data is available. There is no way to know if anything Fido says is factual or evidence-based. All we know is what the PR dept. puts out.
“As noted by observers, multiple factors are no doubt in play, including forward looking capital market forecasts that indicate shifting risk/return characteristics between equities and fixed income. “ Where is there any evidence for this statement?
Philip Chiricotti
Elmer: You should buy a dog and get some love in your life. The evidence is obvious to those that know what they are talking about, i.e., consultants truly knowledgeable about Fidelity. You are an outsider not capable of looking inside at the essence. A waste of time to interface with you.
Elmer Rich III
Ah, the classic personal attack to dodge a question. So instead of answering legitimate questions – Phil C personally attack the questionnaire. It’s a tactic called “Atatck the messenger.” A very tired and unprofessional tactic – but it works.
Like the dog mention, sleazy but a crowd pleaser.
I have worked with Fidelity since 1991 when they proclaimed that 'This 401k thing is gonna go nowhere.”
Look, Fido is one of the Big Dogs so everyone wants to make nice and get sponsorship money. i have no interest in any check from them. Phil, has conferences to fund, and profit personally from, so he will lead the charge on flattery. Understandable.
Fido also will show it’s “teeth.” We criticized or questioned them years ago and they stalked us online and sent us a Cease and Desist letter. Little ole us! Fair enough, they have always been heavy handed.
Here they are effectively saying:
- There is a problem with TD funds
- We have studied it internally
- We have solved the problem
OK, since this was all internal it is currently only a sales claim. There is no way to know if any of their statements are true. That is typical for sales organizations but not professional ones.
The financial services industry, because of the web, can no longer promote platitudes and business claims with no evidence. The web reveals all. Just a fact of life now.
Philip Chiricotti
You will need at least two dogs.
Elmer Rich III
OK. Phil wants to make it personal rather than professional. Let’s unpack his personal side.
As the promoted “Center for Due Diligence” let’s do some due diligence and ask how much Phil personally, or any entity he benefits from, has received from Fidelity over the last, say, 10 years?
Let’s also ask if there is a “Pay to play” set of business practices for the conferences.
Fair questions?
Stephen Winks
Thanks Robert,
I appreciate that TDF vendors leave it to the consumer when the you know what hits the fan.
Thus my hopeful query “let’s hope TDF vendors have a mechanism to protect capital when things go wrong” which is an increasingly likely scenario as QE is tapered.
Robert, our industry is set up only for only good news and the music is about to stop. TDFs as you cite are selling a false choice for security. It is clear to you, because you have spent decades managing commodity (oil, etc.) pricing risk for our largest corporations.
I hate the fact that unprotected retired investors are headed for a highly likely disaster.
SCW
Robert Boslego
According to a new Allianz Life survey, 84 percent agreed that investors should always have protection from loss, even if it reduces potential gains. This flies in the face of the Fidelity study that small investors have more stomach for risk.
Brooke Southall
Robert,
A big life insurance company says investors should always protect themselves from loss….with life insurance par chance?
Brooke
Robert Boslego
Brooke,
This survey is not about life insurance. It’s about retirement portfolios. “Those with $200,000 in Investable Assets Say Volatility Drives a Desire for Balanced Approach.”
“The vast majority of Americans ages 25+ with more than $200,000 in investable assets surveyed in the Allianz Life 2013 Investor Market Perceptions Study said they are seeking some form of protection from losses as they accumulate assets for retirement. In total, 95% of these respondents said they would like a financial product with no potential loss or at least some level of protection from loss rather than one with unlimited potential growth but also unlimited potential loss.”
Buy-and-hold strategies, regardless of loss potential, is no longer acceptable for many individual investors, perhaps the vast majority, as Allianz has found. If Fidelity says investors can stomach big risk because many didn’t pull out, they are not assessing the stomach-wrenching that was present for many investors, especially those approaching retirement.
Robert
Elmer Rich III
Behavior is all biology and physiology, of course. Thinking, consciousness and “decision making” and subjective experiences have been proven to be largely cultural constructs with weak predictive value on financial behavior.
As the population ages basic biological and physiological factors dominate. For example:
“The wisdom of aging may not apply to economic decisions. In a study of choices make about money, the oldest people performed the worst—even beating out the usual bad-decision champions, adolescents.
“Most important real life decisions are taken under conditions of uncertainty,” she says. When we invest in the stock market or choose a health insurance plan, we have to weigh unknown risks and payoffs. And we may have a harder time making those decisions as we age”
Finally, “risk” is just a sales term for loss. All animals are hyper-avoidant of any suggestion of loss or threat. Humans are overly and harmfully reactive to imagined losses and threats. But that’s how our brains evolved. There is, effectively, no way to teach, talk people out of this behavior.
As we age these weaknesses in brain function accelerate – more so in men. These are medical facts.
R. McAloon
The underperformance by the Freedom Funds are not due to fees. Fidelity underperformed by a couple of percentage points which is massive considering the correlation among rival funds is VERY high. If you delve a little bit more into the core holdings of the Freedom Funds, you will notice that Fidelity took a sizable bet on inflation-protected securities and commodities over the years. The percentage of total assets for these two classes stretched as high as 14% for some of the funds. Absolutely pathetic.
Fidelity is announcing changes to the set-up and allocations within the Freedom Funds within the next couple weeks and unfortunately for them this is going to open pandora’s box. The last thing anyone wants to see with a money manager is a significant shift in style especially if it spurs from a bad bet. I expect a significant increase in equity allocation with a sharp decrease in commodities and a minor decrease in fixed income. It appears as though Fidelity purposely set up allocations the way they did, and now that the underperformance has caused a shift in investment style for the funds, they will for sure have their tails tucked between their legs until they can outperform or atleast track their benchmark.
Another point worth noting is the lack of experience and slight conflict of interest with these funds. The author mentioned it but there is a bias because they use their own actively managed funds. I see an average of 21 distinct managers working on behalf of Freedom Funds (above average than most target dates) with an average experience of 4 years (significantly below average than most target dates). At this point companies would be better off setting up a custom QDIA using only 2 or 3 funds to track a specific benchmark.