Column: Future of
retirement planning belongs to the cyborgs
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[May 05, 2017]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO
(Reuters) - Who will help you plan for retirement - a robot or a cyborg?
Pundits have been saying for some time now that the future belongs to
“robo-adviser" - automated portfolio services that use algorithms to
manage investments. The robo-services have attracted interest as a way
to deploy low-cost advice, but retirement planning guru Michael Kitces
thinks the real winners will be “cyborgs” - human advisers aided by
advanced technology.
Resistance may be futile, as the Borg collective warned the crew of the
Enterprise on "Star Trek." Advisers will have little choice but to
integrate robo-like technology into their practices, according to Kitces,
director of wealth management for Pinnacle Advisory Group and publisher
of the widely followed Nerd's Eye View blog (http://bit.ly/2pALT8N).
In a provocative presentation at last week’s Morningstar Investment
Conference here, he argued that technology actually will free up
advisers to focus on providing more holistic advice to clients and
reinforce their value at a time when so much basic planning information
is available for free on the internet.
Meanwhile, the new fiduciary standard requiring conflict-free advice on
retirement accounts is pushing the planning field toward providing
broader services that go well beyond portfolio management.
Market returns are uncertain, but planners can help boost retirement
outcomes by helping clients control the factors that are within their
control. A 2013 paper by Morningstar researchers found that retirees can
generate 23 percent more income by making more intelligent financial
planning decisions of the type typically offered by planners, including
optimizing asset allocation, fine-tuning their retirement withdrawal
strategies and making tax-efficient drawdown decisions.
Kitces thinks the most important strategy for advisers will be to use
technology to help clients navigate uncertainty, explore alternatives
and help solve complex problems.
The landscape of technology-enabled advice is becoming concentrated in
the “cyborg” category, he notes, with players like Betterment,
FutureAdvisor and JemStep all adding human advice components to their
tech offerings.
“The cyborg category is winning, not robo,” he said.
The big value-add, Kitces said, will be helping clients think through
more complex questions. “We can be navigators of uncertainty and
explorers of alternatives - what happens to my plan if I retire sooner?
What if I want to work in retirement, or find a new career? Technology
doesn’t do that, but it can facilitate the conversation if I can use
technology to paint the picture for clients.”
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Retirees play poker at a singles club in Sun City, Arizona, January
4, 2013. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
VANGUARD GRABS THE LEAD
The dominant player in the hybrid cyborg category is mutual fund colossus
Vanguard, which launched its Personal Advisor Services (PAS) two years ago this
week; at the end of the first quarter this year, PAS had attracted $65 billion
in assets. Research firm Cerulli Associates reports that 2016 year-end assets
under management at PAS were roughly four times larger than its nearest
competitor, Schwab Intelligent Portfolios ($13 billion) and far ahead of
Betterment ($6.1 billion), Wealthfront ($4.7 billion) and Personal Capital ($4.3
billion).
PAS benefits from Vanguard’s massive scale - at its launch, $15 billion was
transferred from a legacy advisory service for high net-worth clients, and 85
percent of clients already were Vanguard customers before adding PAS. Most are
closing in on retirement age, said Frank Kolimago, who heads the service.
“Many of them were comfortable self-directing their investments while they were
accumulating assets, but concluded that with the complexities of retirement it’s
time to get some professional help,” he said.
PAS
advises retirees on tax-efficient drawdown and decumulation strategies. Advisers
also help with Social Security optimization, estate planning and nonretirement
goals such as college saving, or perhaps saving for a vacation home.
One of the most profound changes, Kolimago said, is the shift away from the old
brokerage orientation of beating the market investing to meeting objectives. “We
frame the conversation that way - how well are you doing related to your own
unique objectives?”
He adds that the human dimension plays an important role in volatile markets.
"We can serve as an emotional circuit-breaker, and help people from making
short-term decisions that can hurt them in the long run."
Opponents of the fiduciary standard keep looking for ways to bring it down - an
effort that is likely to fail. Meanwhile, the cyborgs (and robos) already are
far down the track toward a fiduciary reality. PAS is a registered investment
advisory firm that already complies with the conflict-free standard. “It’s
straightforward for us," said Kolimago. "Many things that the rule requires are
already built into what we have designed.”
The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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