Business

Keeping Up With The (dow) Jones

Issue 48

Financial markets these days are very fast-moving: shares, exchange rates and commodity prices can all fluctuate dramatically on the smallest piece of news

Keeping up with events that can impact your investment portfolio is, therefore, becoming ever more difficult and time-consuming. Using the services of a discretionary manager takes away the headache of constantly monitoring your portfolio, as it means that the manager – rather than the investor – takes the decision on what to buy and sell without seeking instruction from the investor.

It does not, however, mean that you give up all control of your portfolio.

You shouldn’t think of discretionary investment management as something which will require you to be entirely passive. This is not the case at all. Rather, if you enter a discretionary investment management relationship you will be delegating the execution of an agreed overall investment strategy to someone with the right investment skills and experience – along with the backing of a full research team. You will still be well placed to see exactly what is being done with your money and how your wealth manager is performing against a target.

Your investment strategy will have been carefully worked out through a collaborative process of factors such as your long and mid-term objectives; your true attitude to risk and capacity for loss; how any existing investments might be optimised and so on. Once your wealth manager has a full picture of your financial circumstances and goals, they will then create a portfolio for you.

Gary Fawcett, an investment manager and divisional director at Brewin Dolphin, says the terms of engagement between the client and manager are the most important part of the relationship. “Years ago, you might just have been given a piece of paper to sign and then told that the wealth manager would do the rest. Now, it is a far more complex relationship. The manager will do a financial analysis, establish what the client wants to achieve, what risk they want – and can afford – to take, their time horizons and so on.” “When we have agreed the terms of engagement, we know the client’s aims and objectives. We can then establish a benchmark which we will be measured against.” Discretionary management is very different to putting your money into an investment fund where investors will have no knowledge of the fund’s activities beyond a simple annual statement of investment performance: discretionary management is a service, rather than a product. A bespoke portfolio will be created, reflecting the needs of the client and with input from research analysts and other experts on the team.

“Discretionary management is engaging and dynamic,” says Gary. “There is more frequent dialogue and the investment strategy has to be evolutionary. We are looking after people’s investments over a long period, and across multiple generations. Clients will move from the accumulation phase in their 40s and 50s to active retirement in their 60s and 70s and then to passive retirement in their 80s and 90s.”

“They will want different strategies along the way and a discretionary manager will be able to achieve that in an evolutionary, rather than a revolutionary, manner. That means a regular review process is an integral part of the service.”

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