Family Office
TD Ameritrade's RIA unit adds another UMA platform

TDAI opts for FundQuest to enlarge selection of SMAs, UMAs and
fund wraps. RIA custodian TD Ameritrade Institutional (TDAI) has
expanded its investment roster to include FundQuest's Select
Portfolio Solutions (SPS) platform. The new offering includes a
unified managed account (UMA), which TDAI hopes will attract
ex-wirehouse brokers who want access to the models-based products
they'd grown accustomed to.
UMAs combine different asset classes, investment styles and
investment vehicles -- typically separately managed accounts
(SMAs), mutual funds and ETFs and -- in a single account.
Retail style
In addition to UMAs, SPS features FundQuest's mutual-fund wraps,
SMAs, advisor-managed accounts and Russell's Model Strategies
wraps and LifePoints and Target Portfolio life-cycle funds.
"We are constantly looking to add more sophisticated, innovative
and flexible options for our advisors," says TDAI's president Tom
Bradley. "These capabilities enable advisors to spend less time
on research and administrative tasks and more time meeting with
clients."
Last year TDAI brought in Milwaukee-based Capital Market
Consultants (CMC) to provide a range of UMA options from pre-set
portfolios to manager research for do-it-yourself advisors and
broad-based consulting for fee-based firms looking for
platform-support technologies.
At the time TDAI said it also planned to bring in a more
retail-oriented UMA platform to augment the high-end CMC offering
and a five-year-old SMA-only platform sponsored by Chicago-based
Envestnet Asset Management -- and evidently it picked FundQuest.
TDAI said its aim was to boost uptake of managed accounts of all
kinds from 8% to 10% of its overall investment platform to the
10% to 12% custodians like Schwab Institutional and Fidelity
Institutional were seeing.
TDAI wasn't able to say if it has made inroads in this
regard.
David Root, head of institutional sales at Boston-based
FundQuest, says TDAI's "new platform delivers a broad selection
of managed account options combined with back-office operational
support and investment due diligence services that can help RIAs
accelerate the growth of their business."
Access is all
But for a third-party investment provider like FundQuest, landing
an RIA custodian isn't like bringing in a large broker-dealer. "A
'captive' brokerage or a bank might be planning to convert a lot
of assets [to our platform]," says FundQuest's head of marketing
Jim Graves. "A large custodian gives us access to its client
base, which isn't going to mean a lot of assets on day one."
In fact RIA-based advisors don't seem to have taken to SMAs and
their ilk to the extent that brokers have. The 66 RIAs that
responded to a survey by Boston-based research and consulting
firm Aite Group last year said they put, on average, 5% of their
clients' assets in SMAs and 4% in mutual-fund wraps. Mutual funds
meanwhile accounted for a quarter of their allocations and
annuities garnered 16%.
Despite this, Schwab Institutional, which caters mainly to RIAs,
is the biggest non-wirehouse distributor of retail SMAs,
according to Cerulli Associates, another Boston-based research
firm. And the wirehouse stranglehold on SMA distribution is
slipping fast. In early 2005, the big five brokerages distributed
about 80% of retail SMAs; by last summer they accounted for
65%.
Jersey City, N.J.-based TDAI, a division of online brokerage TD
Ameritrade, provides brokerage and custody services to more than
4,000 RIAs.
FundQuest is a subsidiary of Paris-based BNP Paribas. It provides
outsourced investment programs to 110 financial institutions in
the U.S. and Europe. It has $43 billion in assets under
management and administration. -FWR
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