Empower Workplace Assets Rise 13% Through Q2, Personal Wealth Jumps 28%

CEO Ed Murphy says rollover capture also increased year-over-year in the quarter for assets with an average of about $100,000.


Empower saw its assets under administration rise about 13% from one year ago to $1.4 trillion, while its personal wealth division rose 28% to $65 billion through the year’s second quarter, according to an earnings report Wednesday from parent company Great-West Lifeco Inc.

During the quarter ending June 30, Empower’s earnings increased 57% year-over-year, up 21% from the first quarter, according to the Greenwood Village, Colorado-based division of Great-West. Empower also announced an increase in participants of 5% from the year prior, to 18.3 million people.

The report on the personal wealth side comes about six months after Empower announced the completed integration of its acquisition of Personal Capital, with a rebranding to Empower Personal Wealth and an effort to further sync its retirement plan business with consumer wealth management.

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“We are starting to see some of the benefits associated with the transactions beginning to play out,” says CEO Ed Murphy. “It’s one of those quarters where we were hitting on all cylinders.”

Murphy cited sales growth of 5% quarter-over-quarter in the consumer wealth business, overseen by Carol Waddell, who was named to the post in January.

“I would stay we are still in the early stages, but we are really pleased with the progress with the qualified leads that we are seeing and converting those leads directly or referring some of them to our adviser partners,” Murphy says. “There is no shortage of lead generation activity, and I think that’s evident in the direct-to-consumer space, but also the rollovers that we are seeing come off of our workplace solutions platform.”

Empower’s rollover capture has grown quarter-over-quarter, according to Murphy, in part because the firm is able to service account averages of about $100,000, which are often passed up by third-party wealth managers.

“They tend to set higher thresholds in terms of complexity and dollar amounts,” Murphy says. “But in the case of Empower, we can support those customers, and we don’t discriminate on account balances.”

In terms of workplace solutions, Murphy reports a sales pipeline of $2 trillion in requests for proposal or information opportunities. He notes strong client retention for most plans but says if there is any trend among plan sponsor clients, it is a slowdown in churn among small businesses of 1,000 employees or fewer.

“If the averages are flat or down, sometimes you see more RFP activity [among sub-1,000 employers],” he says. “But when markets are up, the rising tide lifts all boats, and there’s not necessarily the need for sponsors to look outside for other providers.”

Murphy says he is “cautiously optimistic” about the overall economy through the rest of the year and expects to see general M&A activity return to stronger levels in 2024.

“M&A opportunities to make additional investment, either in partnerships or outright acquisitions, will emerge, and you’ll see a lot more in 2024 than we’re seeing in 2023,” he says.

For Empower specifically, the CEO says: “I think if there’s an opportunity for us to strengthen and enhance our product offering, add talent to the organization, add scale, add capabilities that we think are going to be important to our customers—we’ll be very engaged in those kinds of situations.”

Vanguard, J.P. Morgan, BlackRock Lead Fund Flows in First Half

Vanguard and BlackRock saw gains from passive mutual fund and ETF management, with JP Morgan gaining on active, according to Simfund data.


The Vanguard Group, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., and BlackRock Inc. led the nation’s largest asset managers in long-term fund inflows in the first half of 2023, according to data from ISS Market Intelligence Simfund, which, like PLANADVISER, is owned by Institutional Shareholder Services Inc.

Vanguard and BlackRock, which are also among the nation’s largest defined contribution only investment managers, saw positive net inflows driven in large part by passive mutual funds and passive exchange traded funds through June 30.

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Vanguard led the pack with about $42 billion in net new flows, with inflows from passive funds being offset by outflows of $29 billion from actively managed mutual funds. BlackRock, for its part, saw the third-highest inflows at $15.4 billion, with active outflows of $13.2 billion cutting down passive gains.

J.P. Morgan saw the second-highest inflows in the period at $35 billion and bucked a trend toward passive management by seeing most of its gains from actively managed funds. The asset manager had $26 billion in active net new flows, and $8.9 billion in passive new flows. No other firms saw inflows in both active and passive strategies.

The Capital Group Companies, which owns American Funds, only provides actively managed funds, and saw net outflows of $20.2 billion, according to Simfund.

When it came to the less popular active funds, ETFs led the charge with $25.6 billion of inflows, as compared to $213 billion in outflows from actively managed mutual funds. Passive ETFs came in at $184.4 billion in inflows, and passive mutual funds were $57.4 billion.

Overall net flows came in at $74.5 billion in the first half, well outpacing 2022 inflows for the same period, which were a total of $54.3 billion.

Outflows from actively managed funds overall of $95 billion was still a lot less significant than the same period of 2022. During that time period, active outflows hit $187.5 billion, according to the data. Meanwhile, total passive inflows were $241.9 billion in the first half of 2022, and $135.3 billion for the first half of 2023.

When it came to total assets under management by firm, the top 10 from 2022 to 2023 remained the same but for one new entrant. Charles Schwab entered at the tenth spot, replacing Franklin Resources Inc., the parent of Franklin Templeton Investments, which had been in the 9th spot in 2022.

Asset Manager

Active Net New Flows $MM 1H

Passive Net New Flows $MM 1H

Net New Flows $MM 1H

Total Assets $MM Through June ‘23

Vanguard

-29,107.2

 

71,330.346

 

42,223.1

 

6,921,007

 

BlackRock Inc.

-13,170.2

28,556.565

15,386.3

2,756,375

Fidelity Investments

-22,361.7

34,241.706

 

11,880.0

 

2,353,889

 

The Capital

Group Companies

-20,190.2

N/A

-20,190.2

2,054,372

State Street Corp.

-1,490.8

6,766.548

5,275.7

1,113,397

Invesco Ltd.

 

-12,113.3

6,291.820

-5,821.4

664,172

 

T. Rowe Price

-27,129.7

543.724

-26,586.0

655,560

J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.

26,095.7

8,955.844

35,051.5

527,959

Dimensional Fund Advisors

5,063.4

-332.005

4,731.4

470,470

Charles Schwab

-648.5

13,153.964

12,505.5

 

444,481

 

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