Family Office
Wealth firm Pitcairn goes 100% open architecture

An "old-line" multifamily office chucks out proprietary products
altogether. Pitcairn, a multifamily office with a pedigree going
back to the 1920s and a long track record as a core manager, has
jettisoned its in-house asset-management program and moved to a
wholly "open architecture" investment platform.
Jenkintown, Pa.-based Pitcairn says its move to true open
architecture, coupled with its long-standing planning and trust
capabilities, "represents a significant advance in the
wealth-management industry and will enable Pitcairn to provide
clients with enhanced investment programs that are tax efficient
and customized to meet their individual needs."
In the money-management business "open architecture" is a
slippery term. Some use it to describe the combination of outside
investment products with in-house offerings. Others call that
"enhanced" or "hybrid" architecture and reserve the "open"
designation for investment platforms -- like Pitcairn's new one
-- that are completely devoid of proprietary offerings.
"Pitcairn is a leader," says its chairman and CEO Dirk Junge. "We
maintain that status by being sensitive to the needs of our
clients and attuned to changes in the investment
marketplace."
New partners
Leslie Voth, Pitcairn's head of wealth-management services,
reiterates that Pitcairn's move to open architecture came in
response to client demand. "Our clients' need for long-term
planning and customization drives us to a model that will be in
place in 50 to 60 years," she says.
Pitcairn supervises about $4 billion in assets for 94
ultra-high-net-worth households; it classifies 34 of them as
multi-generational.
"Our clients are looking for objective advice; especially when it
comes to the next-generation issues" says Voth. "They want access
to 'best of breed.'"
Pitcairn has been tapping outside managers for about 15 years, so
it already has an established roster of sub-advisors. But it's
now working with Rockville, Md.-based investment-platform and
research provider Fortigent to help it assess additional
managers. Pitcairn has also called on Seattle-based overlay
manager Parametric to strengthen its investment offerings.
Overlay management is the process of coordinating trades,
managing cash flow and enhancing their overall tax efficiency of
models-based portfolios.
Voth says Pitcairn spent about 18 months assessing platform
providers and overlay managers. It chose Fortigent and Parametric
because "both firms, like us, focus on taxable investors."
Fortigent's CEO Andrew Putterman says that bringing in a
"prestige client" like Pitcairn "is clearly helpful us" from a
public-relations viewpoint.
Rare bird
But more than its value in terms of bragging rights, working with
Pitcairn is proving to be a significant learning experience, says
Putterman. "We really are partnering together, but they provide
the leadership -- and they're pushing us."
One result of Pitcairn's high standards, adds Putterman, is the
development, with Fortigent and Parametric, of a "tax-efficient"
unified managed account (UMA) program featuring "high-end
boutique managers."
UMAs are fee-based, single-account investment products that
typically feature combinations of separately managed accounts,
mutual funds and ETFs.
Although open architecture might not be the norm among
wealth-management firms, it's still far from novel -- especially
among wealth-management firms founded in the last 10 or 15
years.
But Pitcairn is "one of the first of the old-line firms" to go
that route, according to Alvin Clay III, CEO-designate of Devon,
Pa.-based Davidson Capital Management, and CEO of Pitcairn until
about 14 months ago.
In fact, with some exceptions -- St. Louis, Mo.-based Lowenhaupt
Global Advisors comes to mind -- it's hard to think of another
decades-old multifamily office without proprietary
investment offerings.
Glass houses
Pitcairn started out in 1923 as a family office for the heirs of
John Pitcairn, a Scottish immigrant to the U.S. who made his
fortune manufacturing plate glass just as developments in
engineering were making glass a ubiquitous element in skyscraper
construction.
In 1987 a family rift put an end to the old Pitcairn family
office and led within a few years to the creation by one faction
of Pitcairn Trust, a commercial family office that became
Pitcairn Financial Group in 2005. In 2007 the firm changed its
name to "Pitcairn," period.
The Pitcairn family is still the firm's sole owner. Nearly a
third of its client base is kin to Scottish John.
Pitcairn was a one-location business for years. In 2004, however,
it opened a second office in St. David's Pa. In 2006 it opened an
office in Tysons Corner, Va.
Old-school wealth managers have traditionally tended to keep a
hand in proprietary investment products because it's good for the
bottom line. Investment management is a fat-margin business,
after all; wealth-management -- especially
wealth-management of the high-touch, bill-paying,
all-but-dog-walking variety -- isn't.
Managing assets was a way firms could afford to provide the more
touchy-feely services they needed to provide in order to retain
wealthy clients.
Now though, changes in fee structure are altering the old
equation.
Less compression
"The fee implications of open architecture aren't as dramatic as
they used to be," says Clay. "There has been much less fee
compression in recent years so that firms can charge clients 150
to 200 basis points" for services based on assets under
supervision.
In fact, Pitcairn has adopted a flat-fee structure "for
family-office and investment services," according to Voth.
Fortigent's Putterman says that improvements in outsourcing
options are also making it easier for wealth-management firms to
eschew in-house money management. "They can do it now --
practically and cost-effectively -- and they can do it with
outsourcing partners they actually team with."
And of course -- as any outsourcer will tell you -- working with
competent vendors can free a wealth manager to concentrate on
clients without having "to be an expert at everything," says
Putterman. "That's something that Pitcairn gets."
However much it gets it, Pitcairn also understands that the
changes it has made have profound business-culture
implications.
Both things
"We know that," says Voth. "We're moving away from being a quiet,
private family office. But we know the time was right for this
change."
But Clay, who is buying into Davidson Capital Management in
partnership with Boston Private Financial, doesn't think wealth
firms have to charge full bore into open architecture.
"Clients want independence, objectivity and performance, not
specifically open architecture," says Clay. "Open
architecture just happens to be the industry's answer to
that."
Davidson Capital Management provides in-house investment
products, and Clay has no intention of changing that when he
takes over as CEO next month. That said, he also plans to augment
Davidson's offerings with non-proprietary investments.
"If you can demonstrate to clients that you're working in their
best interests, I think you can do both things under one roof,"
says Clay. -FWR
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