Who needs to sit next to a trader? Asset managers embrace outsourcing
Send a link to a friend
[January 26, 2021] By
Carolyn Cohn
LONDON (Reuters) - More pension funds,
insurers and asset managers are outsourcing part or all of their dealing
desks to specialist traders as they seek to cut costs and adapt their
operations to deal with the coronavirus crisis, industry sources say.
Last year's volatility in markets, plunging as the pandemic took hold
and rebounding as government stimulus kicked in, meant asset managers
spent more time juggling trades and less time on their usual job of
long-term asset allocation.
Moving some or all of their trading to specialist firms offers access to
a larger group of banks and brokers, making it cheaper to execute trades
and allowing asset managers to cut trading staff and trading terminal
costs, industry sources say.
The shift to outsourcing has also been accelerated by changes in working
practices brought about by the pandemic.
"As we all work from home, people are realising you don't need to be
physically sitting next to the traders to be able to communicate," said
Tom Carroll, head of asset management at British fund manager Sanlam
Investments, which outsourced trading to Northern Trust shortly before
the pandemic.
Carrol said the move meant his company's 20 fund managers could "focus
more on what they're good at" - picking assets for the long term rather
trading through short-term volatility.
Northern Trust global head of integrated trading Gary Paulin said the
bank had 65 outsourced trading clients, of which 18 were added in 2020.
Half the new clients were long-only asset managers, rather than those
involved in short selling or other hedging activity. Two were asset
owners such as pension funds.
"Last year was a really, really important turning point for the
industry," he said, adding that asset managers were rethinking how they
operated as the type of market volatility seen in 2020 "always exposes a
bloated cost base".
Natixis Investment Managers International's outsourced trading unit's
turnover rose 18% to 317 billion euros ($384 billion) in 2020 due to the
extra volatility.
Investment bank Cowen's global outsourced trading unit doubled its
revenue in 2020, said Jack Seibald, Cowen's managing director and global
co-head of prime brokerage and outsourced trading. He did not disclose
revenues from the business.
"The lockdown opened the eyes of so many managers to the idea that
outsourced trading can be a credible solution," he said.
SLOW BURN
Outsourcing back-office functions such as accounting is
well-established, but the trend towards outsourcing trading has been a
slow burn, industry sources say.
[to top of second column] |
The sun rises behind the skyline of St Paul's Cathedral and the City
of London, in London, Britain, August 2, 2020. REUTERS/John
Sibley/File Photo
It started around a decade ago as an equities trading service for hedge funds
and wealth managers. It expanded after European regulation made running a
trading desk more complex https://www.reuters.com/article/us-markets-assetmanagers-insight/asset-managers-farm-out-trading-as-costs-and-complexity-climb-idUSKCN1UV2FE.
Cost savings, operational efficiencies and trading expertise have pushed
investors to outsource dealing, industry sources say, adding it increasingly
appealed to insurers, asset managers and pension funds.
David Berney, founding partner of Ergo Consultancy, said one European insurer
cut the costs of buying or selling a U.S. Treasury bond to "a few" basis points
from 25 bps by outsourcing.
Cole Smead, president of Smead Capital Management in Phoenix, Arizona, which
switched to outsourced trading with Outset Global in October, said the firm no
longer needed to employ a trader in London.
Erik Vynckier, a non-executive director of British insurer Foresters Friendly
Society, said outsourcing made sense for firms with less than 500 million euros
under management.
"It would be difficult to get a good trader for portfolios this size," he said.
Trading groups said they typically hired bank or asset management traders,
sometimes in a team transfer, offering work to those set adrift by the shift
away from in-house operations.
Outsourcing can also cover the analysis, administration and compliance services
handled by in-house teams.
Companies offering trading services have expanded from equities into fixed
income and other assets.
Outset Global started pre-initial public offering (IPO) trading on secondary
markets last year. Northern Trust added European derivatives this year.
Gilles Martins, head of business development at Natixis TradEx Solutions in
Paris, said the firm aimed to add further services in 2021. "This year the
clients want more."
($1 = 0.8243 euros)
(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn; Editing by Edmund Blair)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |