Due to women getting married later, fewer women getting
married and, among those who do marry, an increase in divorce, women are
spending fewer years married overall, according to the Center for Retirement Research
at Boston College.
“If women as a group now spend about half of their adult
years unmarried, it probably makes sense to explore their savings and
investment behavior separately from men,” the center says. “This change has
significant implications for financial planning.”
For the oldest cohort, those born between 1931 and 1941, 72% of women’s years
between the ages of 20 and the last interview were spent married. Looking at mid-Boomers, i.e. those born between 1954 and 1959, the years spent
married in that same timeframe had dropped to 54%. There is strong evidence to show that an individual’s marital status—especially an unexpected change in marital status—has a big impact on financial security over time.
The reason why the number of years women are married has declined is because,
among the oldest cohort, the average age that women got married was 21.4. For
mid-Boomers, this has crept up to 24.3. Among the oldest cohort, 3.9% never
married, and for mid-Boomers, this has risen to 12.2%. Just over one-third,
33.9%, of the oldest cohort divorced, and today, 49.3% of mid-Boomer women are
divorced.
The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College’s
report on this issue, “Do Women Still Spend Most of Their Lives Married?”, can
be downloaded here.
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Manager Changes and the Investment Policy Statement
The rigors of the fiduciary duty can lead plan sponsors to overreact
to fund manager changes in the interest of maintaining an atmosphere of proactivity
with respect to the investment policy statement.
A recent
analysis published by Morningstar shows that, on average, there is
generally speaking no appreciable change in future performance expectations following
a fund-management change; yet, investors commonly overreact and pull money from
these funds.
The findings suggest that the fund industry “handles
succession planning far better than investors react to such changes.” When it
comes to defined contribution plans, the analysis finds, this phenomenon is partly
driven by the fact that plan sponsor decisionmaking is often tightly controlled
by an investment policy statement (IPS) prescribing certain actions that must
be taken when specific triggers are met.
As demonstrated by the latest PLANSPONSOR
DC Plan Benchmarking Survey, 65% of all plans manage their investment
exposures according to a formal, written investment policy statement. This
figure jumps to 88% for plans with more than $100 million invested, showing
that the significant majority of DC retirement plan assets are invested
according to the tenants of an IPS. While investment policy statements are far
from standardized, the research shows many mention in some capacity the plan’s
general objectives and investment structure/criteria. Further outlined will be the ongoing investment monitoring and evaluation
processes, and often a fund manager personnel change serves as a trigger, leading
the plan sponsor to put a fund with a recent manager change onto a watch list. Once on a watch list, it may only take one or two quarters of slightly below-benchmark returns to lead to a funds’ potentially disruptive dismissal.
The Morningstar research shows this widespread approach is probably not
necessary and in fact may be counterproductive from the standpoint of
maximizing returns. The research finds “no relationship between any type of
management change and future returns.” In fact, the highest-performing funds
are those “given the benefit of the doubt by investors” when there is a
management change or another transitory issue. Interestingly, it seems to be only the largest brand-name funds which experience substantial outflows when there is a
manager change, but the loss of the fund manager’s industry experience seems to have no effect on either
returns or growth rates in the longer term.
For context, readers may recall the situation in 2014 when Bill
Gross unceremoniously exited PIMCO. At that time sources told PLANADVISER the
subsequent months of moderate outflows from PIMCO in no way resembled a true
threat to the sustainability of the business or the ability of the management
teams to continue to meet performance goals. Yet many plan sponsors put their
PIMCO funds on watch, including funds that both were and were not directly managed by Gross. It
is true that $23 billion flooded out of the flagship Total Return Fund Gross managed within a
month of his departure, but over the longer term there proved to be no protracted mass exodus impacting other funds sold by the firm. In fact, many advisers attributed some
of the subsequent challenges faced by the firm more to the fact that former CEO
and co-CIO Mohamed El-Erian left the business, and to Gross’s own behavior in that
unique situation—described by some at the time as vengeful and even erratic.
Indeed, Gross was listed as lead portfolio manager on 18
funds, but there were also strong day-to-day portfolio management teams in place on
all of the funds. Thus, little likely changed in the
real management effort of those funds—a fact borne out by the performance profile of PIMCO investments today compared with earlier times when Gross remained at the helm.
NEXT: Reconsider what’s
in the IPS
And so it is only natural that plan sponsors should
reconsider to what extent their IPS includes specific requirements around a
manager change. Offering some thoughts on the proper role of an investment policy
statement, Jim Phillips, president of Retirement Resources, and Patrick McGinn,
vice president of Retirement Resources, suggest as a rule of thumb, sponsors
should be very careful about the use of “shall,” “must,” and “will” statements.
These types of statements in the IPS, whether applying to situations involving
manager changes or anything else, paint the sponsor into a corner and unnecessarily increase liabilities. The better
approach is to “include just enough structure to be able to demonstrate you actually
have a prudent process by which the plan’s investment menu will be managed.”
The Morningstar research is candid that the firm “has had a
history of being skeptical of management changes, putting funds on watch lists.”
“From our study, we find that we do not need to downgrade a
fund every time there is a management change if we feel confident in the
parent, the fund's process, and finally the cost,” the analysis states. “However,
we do need to identify the cases when there is a policy change in the fund's
strategy versus simply a management change, and alert investors of such cases.
We need to do this because we find on average, most management change cases
result in business as usual at the fund.”
The analysis suggests that it is much more sensible to adopt
an approach for monitoring manager changes (whether or not formalized in
an IPS) that strives first and foremost to identify if the change
represents a true policy modification or simply a shift in transitory personnel.
Changes in the former camp likely do warrant a fund being placed on a watch
list, given the Morningstar findings on performance and flow stability, while
those in the latter camp probably do not warrant watch-list consideration.
Fred Reish, chair of the Financial Services ERISA team at
the law firm of Drinker, Biddle and Reath, urges plan sponsors to remember the
IPS “is the committee’s document; you own it.”
“Make sure it’s what you want. There aren’t any required
provisions. It is there to help you, not hurt you,” he warns. If plan sponsors
have doubts about their IPS and what it may force them to do in a situation
such as a manager change, they can change the IPS to say that its provisions
are intended to provide guidance and to help with consistency for committee
decisions but are not binding on the committee.
“Review the IPS once a year, and go through it item by item,
to make sure the committee is following its terms and that it covers all the
investment decisions that need to be made. Committees are most often sued for
the decisions they do not make—or, in other words, the issues they do not pay
attention to,” Reish concludes. “Make sure the agendas for your meetings list
the decisions your IPS says the committee must make. And make sure that all of
the necessary investment decisions are in the IPS—such as expenses, share
classes, revenue sharing, quality of investment management, asset classes,
company stock, brokerage accounts and so on.”