Vanguard unveils advice
and investing program for the hoi polloi
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[May 06, 2015]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Arguing that
many of its customers cannot afford to pay high investment advisory
fees, The Vanguard Group on Tuesday unveiled a low-cost service
combining an automated investment plan with advice from a Vanguard
financial planner.
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After more than two years of testing, the mutual fund giant is
rolling out its Personal Advisor Services to individuals who invest
a minimum of $50,000, far below most conventional advisers'
minimums. It will charge 0.30 percent of assets annually for the
service - or $150 on a $50,000 portfolio - well below the 1.0-2.0
percent range that many full-service firms and investment advisers
offer to wealthy clients.
Advisers will primarily invest client assets in the lowest-cost
share classes of Vanguard's famously low-cost mutual funds, but will
consider written requests for other holdings. Individuals with
$500,000 or more in assets will be assigned a personal adviser.
Others will be assigned advisers at random when logging in.
Vanguard has offered advisory and trust accounts for years that
generally charged annual fees of 0.70 percent of assets and required
minimum investments of $500,000. Over the next year, it will
transfer those investors to the lower-fee program. Some $10 billion
has already moved.
Vanguard said that during the pilot it attracted more than $7
billion of additional assets without direct marketing or
advertising.
Vanguard's direct-marketing-savvy, consumer-friendly reputation and
focus on low- and high-end investors have the potential to threaten
conventional brokerage and advisory firms as well as new "robo-advisers"
that create portfolios of low-cost exchange-traded funds for
neophyte investors.
"Its niche is being the low-cost provider, and if the automation
works well it could be just as profitable with giving advice as with
selling funds," said Len Reinhart, head of Wealthcare Capital
Management, which oversees $1.3 billion for wealthy investors.
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As a nonprofit company that pays salaries rather than fees and
commissions to its advisers, Vanguard says its intentions are less
about competition than about helping needy customers.
“Demographic and behavioral trends point to an increased demand for
advice, and we believe this new service can help more of our clients
reach their financial goals,” Vanguard Chief Executive Bill McNabb
said in a statement.
Sophisticated investors will still need customized advice on taxes,
estate planning and niche areas the new service will not offer,
Vanguard officials said.
They have good reason for calming words. About one-third of the $3.6
trillion sitting in Vanguard funds were sold through brokers and
advisers.
(Reporting by Jed Horowitz; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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