Wells Fargo Expands Investment Solutions

Wells Fargo Institutional Retirement and Trust introduced a managed account service for 401(k) plans, and Wells Fargo Asset Management launched a suite of actively managed TDFs.

Wells Fargo Institutional Retirement and Trust introduced Target My Retirement, a more personalized investment product for its 401(k) plan sponsors and participants.

Target My Retirement builds on the target-date approach to investment allocation through the addition of more personal information about the investor, including an individual’s current financial and demographic information. Like a target-date fund, Target My Retirement is cost-effective and can be used as a plan’s qualified default investment alternative (QDIA).

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Wells Fargo chose Morningstar Associates, a registered investment adviser and part of Morningstar’s Investment Management group, as the independent financial firm that will advise and construct the portfolios for those participants who choose or are defaulted into Target My Retirement in their 401(k) plan. 

The company says its analysis of the market points to a competitive price relative to a broad set of actively managed institutional target-date funds (on average), especially in light of the added value of broader fund selection, non-proprietary model (e.g., independence of Morningstar in developing the model) and individual investment strategy.

“Not everybody in an age band is the same, and Target My Retirement allows participants to craft a more personalized approach within their 401(k) plan,” says Joe Ready, head of Wells Fargo Institutional Retirement and Trust. “Creating a plan for retirement is a journey over many years and with technology, we are at a place where we can do better than offer a one-size-fits-all approach to planning.”

NEXT: A personalized strategy for participants

While Target My Retirement uses the managed account engine “behind the scenes” to provide the personalization, in terms of the participant experience, it offers the straightforward, easily understood approach of a target-date product, Ready tells PLANADVISER. Even if participants don’t provide information about outside assets, the solution offers the same ease-of-use of a target-date fund with the added benefit of a more personalized investment glidepath.

The investment solution allocates contributions and existing account balances to create a customized investment portfolio that targets an 80% income replacement goal post-retirement for participants. While the allocation starts with the participant’s age and expected retirement date, it is further customized using the individual’s gender, account balance, salary level and contribution rate, automatically applied using 401(k) plan data without the participant having to provide any additional data or do any extra work. In addition, Target My Retirement integrates expected Social Security benefits into the portfolio analysis and offers participants the ability to add outside asset information to create a more holistic view.

Participants can select any target retirement date, as opposed to having to select a standard, five-year target-date increment, and can change their target retirement year at any time. Based on the year selected, Target My Retirement will rebalance the participant’s portfolio to a revised allocation. The service offers investment choices that include a mix of well-diversified asset managers using mutual funds and collective funds. A plan sponsor can also opt to use the investment lineup already selected for the 401(k) plan.

Where traditional target-date funds typically support a limited number of age-based portfolios (e.g., 10) along a proprietary glidepath, Target My Retirement currently supports significantly more glidepath scenarios. Each scenario provides a more personalized glidepath for the participant to better reflect the participant’s goals and situation.

“We’re pleased to be able to offer more options to strengthen and support investing for retirement,” says Ready.

NEXT: Actively managed TDFs from Wells Fargo Asset Management

Wells Fargo Asset Management has introduced the Wells Fargo Dynamic Target Date Funds, an investment that offers a new approach designed to help retirement plan participants reach the recommended 80% income replacement goal post-retirement.

“In the years leading up to retirement, a glide path arguably needs to be aggressive enough to meet the participant’s investment goals, yet also be conservative enough to hedge against market losses, particularly close to retirement," says Ron Cohen, head of defined contribution distribution for Wells Fargo Funds Management, LLC. "But it’s difficult for a standard glide path to be both aggressive and conservative at the same time. Wells Fargo Asset Management has developed a new approach that is intended to address this challenge.:

In addition to creating a broadly diversified portfolio with enough equity exposure to help participants achieve their target goal, portfolio managers Christian Chan and Kandarp Acharya employ a set of institutional-caliber risk management techniques that include tactical asset allocation and a patent-pending dynamic risk management approach.

Chan explains that Wells Fargo uses three active risk management techniques to help manage the portfolios during times of volatility while also allowing the managers to opportunistically pursue compelling investment opportunities:

  • A proprietary tactical asset allocation model that allows the managers to pursue market opportunities and create the potential to generate additional excess returns in a risk-conscious manner;
  • A set of volatility management tools that help moderate the impact of short-term market gyrations, particularly within the equity exposure; and
  • A tail risk management overlay strategy that strives to improve participant outcomes by managing excessive volatility and the risk of large, unpredictable downside events.

“Because plan participants reach retirement during different market conditions,” says Chan, “it’s key to have the tools to moderate short-term volatility and limit the impact of sudden, unexpected market losses. Our process allows us to do just that.”

NEXT: An analysis of the target-date universe

In its analysis of the target-date fund universe, Wells Fargo simulated the retirement savings experience of the average individual investor using 5,000 unique investment return scenarios. It based investor savings behavior (during their assumed working years) and asset allocation on a combination of industry statistics and assumptions, including but not limited to:

  • Forty working years from age 25 to 65;
  • A variable salary growth rate greater in early working years and slightly negative as retirement approaches;
  • Increasing savings rates consistent with industry data;
  • Social Security contribution to income replacement at 75% of the value dictated by the Social Security Administration’s quick calculator; and
  • Approximation for the industry average target-date fund glide path (sourced from a 2014 Morningstar target-date report).

Wells Fargo then recorded the participant’s results for each glide path pertaining to his/her:

  • Average ending wealth (at age 65) observed over those 5,000 simulations;
  • The average instance of shortfall; and
  • The average shortfall per occurrence.

The target date represents the year in which investors may likely begin withdrawing assets. The funds gradually seek to reduce market risk as the target date approaches and after it arrives by decreasing equity exposure and increasing fixed-income exposure. The principal value is not guaranteed at any time, including at the target date.

The Wells Fargo Dynamic Target Date Funds are available in five share classes: A, C, R, R4, and R6. Funds are offered in five-year increments from 2015 through 2060, as well as a Dynamic Target Today Fund. The series’ glide path continues to reduce risk for 10 years after the target date before reaching its landing point.

For more information about the Wells Fargo Dynamic Target Date Funds, go to http://wellsfargoadvantagefunds.com or call 800-368-1790.

 

Investors Prefer Guarantees Over Growth

Eighty-one percent would prefer a product with a guaranteed 4% return.

Market volatility has made investors skittish, according to the 2015 Market Perceptions Study from Allianz Life Insurance Company of North America. Eighty-one percent would prefer a product with a guaranteed 4% return to one with an 8% return that is vulnerable to market downturns. This is up from 78% who expressed this preference in 2014, when Allianz Life first started this study.

Asked if they would invest if they had extra cash, 37% said “fear of market uncertainty” would prevent them from doing so. While this is down slightly from 40% in 2014, it is still the major impediment keeping people from investing, followed by “lack of reliable financial guidance” (23%) and “today’s low interest rates” (21%).

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Just over one-third, 34%, say they believe the market is “too volatile and too risky” for their investment style. Only 18% say they think “the stock market is a necessary place to invest money for the long term, even though it can be nerve-wracking at times.” Another 25% say they believe that “with a balanced approach, the stock market is a smart place to invest a portion of one’s assets,” and 23% said they are “comfortable with the stock market for the long term.”

NEXT: Outlook on volatility

Nearly two-thirds, 62%, expect the market will continue to be uncertain, similar to the 64% who expressed this sentiment in 2014. Not surprisingly, 79% think it is important to have a guaranteed source of income in retirement, in line with the 80% who said so in 2014. Only 26% are comfortable with current market conditions and are ready to invest now, down from 28% in 2014.

“Whether it’s a hangover from the market crash of 2008 or the various bumps in the road we’ve experienced along the way, the majority of Americans are simply not comfortable with any type of market volatility and are looking for ways to mitigate exposure while still building up their retirement nest eggs,” says Katie Libbe, vice president of consumer insights for Allianz Life. “Persistent desire for guarantees in this market environment tells a compelling story that, regardless of how the market actually performs, Americans want some type of protection against losses in their retirement savings strategy.”

Asked what they would do if they had extra cash to purchase a financial product, 36% said they would seek out a product that offers a balance of potential growth and some level of protection. Twenty-two percent said they would put extra cash into a product with modest growth potential, 21% said they would put the cash into a savings account earning little or no interest, 13% said they would wait for the market to correct before investing the money, and only 9% said they would seek out a product with high growth potential and no protection from loss.

Ipsos conducted the study for Allianz Life among 797 adults on October 21 and 22.

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