Family Office
Pershing, Phoenix launch a UMA with annuity rider

The firms hail LIS2 as a first-of-a-kind retirement-income
managed account. Pershing's third-party investment platform
affiliate Lockwood Capital Management is working with insurance-,
annuity- and investment-product provider Phoenix to give advisors
a way to offer clients unified managed accounts (UMAs) that
include lifetime-income guarantees.
Lockwood's Longevity Income Solutions (LIS2) asset-allocation
models blend separately managed accounts, mutual funds and ETFs
and, thanks to Phoenix, provide downside protection -- in effect
an annuity rider -- in the form of a guaranteed 5% annual payout.
They're meant to help investors -- especially retirees -- manage
their lives by providing them with predictable income payments
regardless of the actual performance or value of the account.
Boomers
"Baby boomers are the first generation in modern history
responsible for managing their own retirement plans," says
Lockwood's CEO Jim Seuffert "[They] want [retirement-income
guarantees] like their parents' defined benefit plans
provided."
Given the sheer number of boomers out there and the fact that
they'll be tipping into retirement for the better part of the
next three decades, Lockwood and Phoenix may be on to something.
Boomers account for about a third of the U.S population, and they
own about 40% of all U.S. private assets.
And, as a group, boomers are expected to live longer than any
previous generation, thanks to higher levels of personal fitness
and improving medical care. In 1955 the average retirement age
for Americans was 68 and average life expectancy was 72. Now the
average retirement age is 62 and average life expectancy has
jumped to 80. More starkly, 65-year-old man has one chance in
four of seeing his ninety-second birthday; a 65-year-old woman is
as likely to get past age 94.
In addition to being long-lived, boomer-generation retirees face
rising health costs. Out-of-pocket costs beyond Medicare ranging
from $125,000 to $300,000, according to the Employee Benefit
Research Institute -- and that's not counting nursing-home
expenses.
"It's clear we need new ways to help our aging population attain
a comfortable and satisfying retirement, and these solutions need
to be simple, low cost and flexible," says Phoenx' CEO Dona
Young. "Through this strategic alliance with Lockwood Capital
Management, we can apply features of life insurance and annuities
to investment products and offer investors a unique approach to
guaranteeing an income for life."
Perceptions
The tie-in with Lockwood also gives Phoenix a chance to provide
annuity-like services to high-net-worth investors without having
to call them annuities, according to Joe Fazzino, spokesman for
the Hartford, Conn.-based insurance company.
"With annuities there is a perception of complexity, a perception
of high costs and a perception that the investors loses control
of the assets," says Fazzino. "When we describes annuities to
high-net-worth focus groups, the typical reaction is 'That sounds
great,' but when we say they're annuities, some people pull back
because of these perceptions. [Working with Lockwood] is a way we
feel advisors can give their clients the benefits of annuities
without the perceived negatives."
Fazzino says LIS2 will cost the end investor a fee of about 255
basis points on account assets, all in. That compares with an
all-in fee of 320 basis points to 350 basis points for a typical
variable annuity.
And LIS2 may confer tax benefits as well. The income stream comes
initially from the asset base -- the principal, if you will --
which is taxed as a capital gain. Only after that's drawn down
does income derived from the structure become taxable as ordinary
income. Traditional annuity payments are usually taxed as
ordinary income across the board.
Phoenix and Lockwood say LIS2 is the first product of its kind --
and Fazzino says its newness caused some head scratching at the
SEC.
But Retirement Income Industry Association (RIIA) chairman
Francois Gadenne saw such products coming several years ago. In a
2006 interview with FWR, he said that retirement-income products
would probably end up being combinations of traditional
investment offerings, specialized accumulation vehicles and
insurance products -- a fair description of LIS2.
Phoenix' head of business development Jack Sharry says the word
he's getting from advisors is that "they want to help their
clients guarantee a lifetime income stream. In response, we
developed a simple, cost-effective solution by wrapping a managed
account from [Lockwood] with an income guarantee offered by
Phoenix."
Jersey City, N.J.-based Pershing is a subsidiary of Bank of New
York Mellon. -FWR
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