UK asset managers told to show they offer value for
money
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[April 05, 2018]
By Huw Jones and Simon Jessop
LONDON (Reuters) - Asset managers must
assess each year how much value for money they offer investors,
Britain's markets watchdog said on Thursday, stopping short of tougher
measures called for by critics of the 8 trillion pound ($11 trillion)
sector.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said asset managers would have 18
months to prepare for a requirement from September 2019 to make an
annual assessment of value, as part of their duty to act in the best
interests of investors.
In a requirement that will take effect six months later than originally
indicated, asset managers will have to publish their value assessments
and show if any corrective action was taken if charges were identified
as not being justified.
After pressure from industry, the value for money idea floated in last
year's review has been broadened to overall value to avoid what the FCA
says is too much focus on costs.
"Changes to focus on wider value, rather than just charges, will better
enable firms to demonstrate this value to their customers, although the
new public statements could risk overloading consumers with
information," said Andrew Strange, a director at consultants PwC.
There is no common template for managers to assess value, they are only
asked to spell out the factors taken into consideration such as the
range and quality of services provided and the performance of the fund
after deduction of all payments.
Fund managers will also have to appoint at least two independent
directors to their boards by September 2019.
Shares in leading asset managers outpaced gains in the broader stock
market, with Schroders <SDR.L> up 1.7 percent and Standard Life Aberdeen
<SLA.L> up 2 percent at 1031 GMT.
The sector's main UK trade body the Investment Association welcomed
recognition by the FCA that investors judge asset managers by
performance and service, as well as cost.
But Gina Miller, founding partner of investment firm SCM Direct, said it
was shocking how long it had taken the FCA to "achieve nothing more than
restating the obvious", without tackling "misleading fees".
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The Canary Wharf financial district is seen from Greenwich Park in
London, Britain, January 22, 2017. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
SWEEPING REVIEW
The reforms build on the watchdog's sweeping review of Britain's asset
management sector published last June that found evidence of weak price
competition.
The FCA also launched a further consultation on remedies related to funds
providing better information about their products, covering how fund objectives
can be expressed more clearly, and benchmarks used for tracking performance.
This would make life harder for so-called "closet trackers", or funds which say
misleadingly they actively chose investments and therefore charge higher fees.
Tracker funds which follow a benchmark, such as the FTSE 100 index, charge lower
fees.
PwC's Strange said the proposals would force managers to be even more vigilant
in how they use benchmarks in marketing materials and show fund performance when
no benchmarks are used.
The FCA said the chair of an asset management firm's board will be directly
accountable to regulators for assessing value for money and ensuring independent
directors are appointed.
Asset managers will have a year to comply with changes to how they profit from
investors buying and selling their funds, known as box profits, and with steps
that make it easier for investors to shift into cheaper share classes, the FCA
said.
Daniel Godfrey, the former CEO of the Investment Association who called for more
transparency in the sector, said the changes should improve value for investors,
and that the importance of forcing asset managers to be clearer on their use of
benchmarks should not be underestimated.
Kevin Doran, chief investment officer at broker AJ Bell, said: "For far too
long, many fund providers seem to have forgotten just whose money it is they
manage, hiding behind vague objectives and excessive charges."
(Additional reporting by Sinead Cruise; Editing by Jane Merriman and David
Holmes)
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