Family Office
Firms fight to dominate managed account processing

SEI's latest win puts distance between outsourcing leaders and
also-rans. SEI has just scored a significant win in the
separately managed account (SMA) processing space. In picking up
ING Investment Management's $3-billion, 7,500-account retail
program, the Oaks, Pa.-based investment processor has established
itself as a leader in a crowded field of managed account
back-office outsourcers.
SMA outsourcing may seem removed from the world of the
client-facing advisor. In fact though, it bears watching by
fee-based advisors of all stripes because its emergence is
changing the economic dynamics of the wealth-management business,
according to Daniel Seivert, managing partner of 3C Financial
Partners, a Los Angeles-based investment banking and consulting
firm.
Right now CheckFree's APL dominates the SMA space as the primary
SMA-portfolio accounting and connectivity provider. Much
of CheckFree's pricing power rests in its having "a
one-to-many" relationship with SMA managers. But as the
outsourcers claim more business in the space -- each in effect
standing in for groups of managers -- CheckFree's relationships
will inevitably shrink in number, giving the outsourcers more
control; an effect aggravated by the emergence of APL competitors
such as Market Street Advisors and Vestmark.
From that "there's the potential [for the outsourcers] to put
downward pressure on the overall expense of SMAs," says Seivert,
resulting either in cheaper product to the consumer or -- since
sponsors seem unlikely to raise management fees any time soon --
more money going to the distribution side.
Advances in outsourcing technology can also help make more exotic
offerings like multiple-discipline portfolios and unified managed
accounts more readily available to independent advisors through
improved workflow and other processing capabilities including
smarter ways to handle and account for multi-currency
transactions and fixed-income holdings.
They'd know
ING's new outsourcing deal is significant because spotlights SEI
as the industry's only two-time recipient of business from
asset-management firms -- ING and TCW -- that had previously
outsourced SMA administration to other processors.
"We love the educated buyer," says John Alshefski, head of
business development for SEI's investment processing group,
referring specifically to ING, which selected SEI after its old
provider the Bank of New York got out of SMA processing earlier
this year to concentrate on institutional-asset and mutual-fund
processing.
Alshefski won't comment on TCW, which is widely thought to have
dropped Mellon as its SMA processor in favor of SEI early in
2005. Mellon still administers TCW's institutional accounts and
mutual funds.
Sandy Schwartz of the McNamara Group, a Rockville Centre,
N.Y.-based consultancy, says these deals points to consolidation
in the SMA outsourcing space -- with liftout-style processors
like the Bank of New York and Mellon losing ground to the "more
technology-based" approach used by SEI and several others.
"With a liftout you're saying, 'We can do the job better than
you've done with the same people and the same resources -- we
didn't hire any of the people, and we didn't train them, but we
can do it better.'" says Schwartz. "That's a tough statement to
make."
"That's not to say liftouts can't work," adds Schwartz. "But with
a more technology-based approach, you're saying, 'We can do this
work better using our own resources.'"
ING's head of operations David Bercaw says the principal drawback
of the liftout model is stasis. "[The Bank of New York] took over
what we were doing and it never changed," he says. "The danger of
a liftout is that the environment stays pretty much the
same."
ING's experience with the Bank of New York might have been better
in that regard -- and cheaper overall -- if the bank had managed
to attract more clients than ING and few small spillover
contracts from institutional deals. "It just didn't get off the
ground," says Bercaw.
Working with SEI, on the other hand, is "like dealing with a
software vendor," says Bercaw. "You do business with a software
vendor to get a jump on whatever it is you're doing and
you're buying into the vendor's future innovations that will help
you change and grow."
ING went with SEI in its second go-around with SMA outsourcing
because of its superior workflow capabilities, according to
Bercaw. "It gives us imaging and document-tracking capabilities
and a more user-friendly interface so you don't have to be an APL
expert see what's going on."
Growth business
SEI has been in the SMA outsourcing business since it bought the
rights to market Rorer's processing platform in 2003. It has
eight clients, three of them brought in this year with another
two or three due in by Christmas.
In addition to SEI and Mellon, the remaining outsourcers are
Citigroup, State Street, JPMorganChase, PFPC and BISYS. Some
industry observers -- 3C Financial's Seivert among them -- say
that's four or five too many, and that a shakeout is
inevitable.
Events of the last 18 months seem to indicate that SEI and
Citigroup have moved away from the pack. SEI can point to strong
deal flow and the extra bragging rights of winning business from
at least two managers in a position to compare them to others in
the field.
Citigroup, the last to enter the fray, has half a dozen
publicized wins to its credit since March 2005 -- including
Lazard's $17-billion SMA program.
JPMorgan, the second-last entrant in the outsourcing space, has
had a decent run of three or four wins over the past year or so,
making it a strong contender for the third-place spot.
State Street, which counts Seligman, Brandywine and State Street
Global Advisors as clients, announced in 2004 that it would stop
funding its SMA outsourcing business. For all that
though, Schwartz says it's still a significant
player. Having developed a "decent processing system," State
Street has been "flying under the radar," he says.
PFPC has two or three clients. If BISYS has any at all, they're
in stealth mode.
Of the 25 or so deals that have been struck in the space, three
or four -- like TCW's and ING's -- have come undone. Still up for
grabs, according to SEI, are 85 of the top 100 SMA managers.
In addition to a good supply of existing SMA managers, SEI and
Citigroup say they're getting increased interest from managers
who want outside processing in place before they branch
off into retail SMAs.
"We definitely see this as a growth business," says SEI's
Alshefski.
Schwartz agrees. "The bubble definitely hasn't burst yet," he
says. But he adds that developments at this stage can set
the board for the end game.
"This is the sort of information the market looks for,"
Schwartz says of SEI's latest deal. "It's telling the
street where the conviction lies." -FWR
.