Family Office
RIA takes low-correlation strategies to the market

Emerald Asset Advisors' allocation strategies find homes at
Schwab and FTJ. Weston, Fla.-based RIA Emerald Asset Advisors is
making its Emerald Allocation Strategies (EAS) available to other
independent advisors, initially through Schwab's Marketplace and
the FTJ FundChoice investment programs. EAS uses mutual funds and
ETFs to deliver performance that is largely independent of market
conditions.
"Since investors with a net worth below $1 million typically
cannot invest in hedge funds, this group has been looking for
alternatives to traditional strategies for some time," says
Emerald's CIO Robert Isbitts. "We have used EAS for our firm's
clients for years, and now we invite other independent advisors
with clients at all levels of wealth to access them."
Three portfolios
EAS offers three portfolios with individual performance
composites.
The Hybrid portfolio exhibits low volatility and correlation to
broad markets, and it uses mutual funds and ETFs to offer daily
liquidity, greater transparency, and lower costs. The
Concentrated Equity portfolio is a varied mix of equity styles
that concentrate on long-term capital growth with limited
holdings. This strategy also pursues lower volatility levels by
purchasing short-index securities as a hedge during risky times.
Finally, the Global Cycle portfolio invests in market areas that
exhibit high short-term volatility but capitalize on long-term
trends. Again, short-index securities act as a hedge during
periods of market risk.
Some market environments simply don't work for long-term
investors who restrict themselves to traditional approaches to
asset allocation, according to Emerald portfolio manager Matt
MacEachern. "EAS employs a set of strategies that have low
correlation to the broad stock and bond markets, while offering
varying degrees of expected volatility," he says. "This allows
the advisor to allocate among the strategies in line with each
client's risk tolerance. Using this trio of low-correlation
portfolios, each with a different level of expected volatility,
the advisor can customize EAS to each client's risk
tolerance."
There's a $250,000 minimum on Schwab's Marketplace program. FTJ
has no minimum. The Schwab version of EAS uses no-load mutual
funds and ETFs; FTJ uses no-load funds only -- so far anyway.
Schwab's Marketplace is an open-architecture platform with
hundreds of participating managers.
Allan Budelman, a partner of Emerald and a member of the EAS
portfolio-management team, says the point of EAS "is to make
money, not to track the broad stock and bond markets."
Emerald manages around $270 million. -FWR
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