Family Office
Obama admin likely to impact client finances: SEI

Wealth managers advising clients to adopt tax-managed investing
strategies. Half of bank-based wealth managers think that Barack
Obama's victory in the recent U.S. presidential election will
have a negative impact on their clients, according to a "Quick
Poll" of attendees at an SEI private-banking symposium in Denver
last week.
The other half of those surveyed either weren't sure what overall
impact an Obama administration would have on their clients'
portfolios (38%), or thought the effect of the new president's
policies would be, on balance, good for their clients.
Capital gains
A clear majority -- 88% -- say that Obama's main mission with
respect to U.S. personal finance is to restore confidence.
Respondents were divided evenly as to whether the
president-elect's policies will in fact -- whatever his mission
may be -- have an impact on investor behavior.
The bank-based wealth-management executives surveyed were
unanimous in seeing a capital-gains-tax hike from 15% to 20% as a
result of Obama's White House win. As a result, they're advising
their clients to consider tax-managed investing strategies. In
fact, 44% have already incorporated tax-managed strategies for at
least some of their clients, and the rest say they plan to get
cracking on that.
"It's quite clear from these survey findings that wealth managers
believe they will be operating in a different environment and
that they need to adjust strategies for their clients
accordingly," says Jim Morris, senior v.p. of SEI's
private-banking group.
Oaks, Pa.-based SEI, a manager of managers and
investment-processing provider, hosts occasional asset-management
symposiums for bank- and trust-company-based wealth-management
executives in regional centers. -FWR
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