Family Office
Fifth Third Bank picks Prima to help build new SMAs

But many banks have a way to go if they hope to compete as wealth
managers. Fifth Third Bank has chosen Prima Capital to help
conduct ongoing manager selection, research and due diligence for
its new best-of-breed separately managed account (SMA)
program.
"When our organization made the commitment to expand our
wealth-management capabilities, we identified Prima Capital early
on due to [its] robust due diligence, research capabilities and
access to top quality managers," says Cheryl Rose, director of
private-client portfolio management at Cincinnati-based Fifth
Third. "Prima was the partner we needed to launch an external
manager program tailored to strategically complement our existing
investment management capabilities."
Seven-year-old Prima, a spin-off from KPMG's investment advisory
services practice, was founded specifically to provide research
and other information in support of open-architecture investment
platforms for private-client investment-product distributors.
Gib Watson, Prima's founder and president, says banks and trust
companies are "steadily migrating to adopt open-architecture as
the foundation for their wealth-management offerings."
That sounds hopeful, but then banks have been losing investment
assets to brokerages and investment advisories -- where access to
outside managers is often a given -- faster than they've been
becoming converts to open architecture. 3C Financial Partners , a
Los Angeles-based investment bank and consulting firm, says that
North American private banks saw their share of high-net-worth
investors' professionally managed assets decline from around 86%
in 1995 to 38% at the end of 2004. By 2010, 3C adds, private
banks could be managing just 29% of those assets in North
America.
Meanwhile global high-net-worth assets have increased
dramatically. The total wealth of individuals and families around
the world with at least $1 million in financial assets went from
$14 trillion in 1995 to about $31 trillion at the end of 2004
with about a third of the total in the U.S. and Canada, according
to 3C.
Banks that do make the leap to providing non-proprietary
asset management show a "commitment to market leadership, and
[to] providing a quality wealth-management experience and a high
level of client service fits well with Prima's core competencies
and values," says Prima's Watson.
Generally speaking
Al Chiaradonna, head of strategy for SEI 's private banking and
trust group, says that banks are unusually well positioned to
fulfill unmet needs for wealthy clients because they often have
pre-existing relationships with these customers as a provider of
commercial banking or basic depository services. But fulfilling
this potential calls for a significant transformation of today's
banking model -- one that goes beyond instituting
open-architecture investment platforms.
"Banks are losing some customers due to a lack of
differentiation," Chiaradonna told attendees of a wealth-industry
conference in Chicago earlier this month. But some clients are
staying put "because they don't see an alternative that offers
them the complete package: a single trusted advisor at one
institution who enables them to use their wealth to reach their
life goals."
But to turn their positive standing in the community into
wealth-management clout, banks will have to start delivering
"differentiated client experience and relationship process,
rather than people and products" and to provide advisory services
based on a comprehensive assessment of a client's needs and
goals, adds Chiaradonna. And to make that "a scalable, consistent
client process" rather than a matter of depending on a
charismatic staffer or two, banks need standardized approaches to
identifying and developing relationship managers.
"Without a repeatable process to find and train capable
relationship managers, there is no way to ensure a consistent
service experience," Chiaradonna said in his conference
presentation.
Oaks, Pa.-based SEI provides investment-platform and processing
provider to financial-service companies. -FWR
.