Subscribe

Wealthiest people buy least-structured products

The wealthiest investors in the U.S. put less of their holdings into structured products than the less affluent, according to a study commissioned by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

The wealthiest investors in the U.S. put less of their holdings into structured products than the less affluent, according to a study commissioned by the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

Individuals with more than $5 million in assets allocated 0.41 percent of their investments to structured products last year, data from the study show. For those with less than $250,000, that proportion was 1.33 percent. Investors with $250,000 to $1 million put 1.53 percent of their holdings in the products, the most of any group.

Structured products, which are debt bundled with derivatives, are marketed as an alternative way to bet on stocks and interest rates and manage risk. Wealthy investors prefer to “cut out the middleman” by trading the components separately, said Lawrence Weinman, an investment adviser in Los Angeles.

“The smaller the asset base, the more likely the investor works with people who are just trying to sell them certain products,” said Weinman, a former institutional derivatives salesman at Paris-based bank Societe Generale SA. Brokers often earn higher fees on structured products than stocks or mutual funds, he said.

The study, released Nov. 1 by the New York-based trade group, included data submitted by 17 brokerages on 38.2 million investors, about a third of U.S. households. Andrew DeSouza, a Sifma spokesman, provided additional data in an e-mail. Sifma commissioned Oliver Wyman, a New York-based consulting company, to evaluate the impact of applying a fiduciary duty to brokers.

Clients’ Interests

Brokers are now required to offer clients “suitable” investments, while investment advisers have a fiduciary duty to put clients’ financial interests first. In January, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission will finish its study of a uniform standard for brokers and advisers. The agency was required to consider the rule change by the Dodd-Frank financial regulation law.

People with $1 million to $5 million in assets had 0.73 percent of their investments in the securities, the study showed. Individuals in the study held $70.4 billion of structured products overall, or about $1,800 each.

U.S. investors bought a record $42.4 billion of structured notes this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Morgan Stanley issued $10.1 billion, the most of any bank. Bank of America Corp. issued $7.9 billion, the second-most.

–Bloomberg

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

The largest variable annuity providers

VA sales have been in a slump the last several years. In 2014, the last full year for…

Insurance vehicles can be powerful way for advisers to reach younger investors

For advisers who want to expand their firms by reaching out to the next generation of investors – those in their 20s, 30s or 40s – long-term and cross-generational financial vehicles such as fee-only life insurance and no-load annuities offered to clients of RIAs through Ameritas Advisor Services should be considered as a central part of the effort.

The next great opportunity for investment advisers

As baby boomers retire, advisers must engage `Generation Now'

Market swings can lead to emotional decision-making

A managed volatility approach can help

How ‘competitive collaboration’ is shaping the future of the advice business

More than a dozen top advisor technology companies compare notes, share their vision for RIAs at TD Ameritrade Institutional's 5th annual Veo Open AccessTechnology Summit.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print