November 21, 2024

Bucks: Following the Rich

In his Wealth Matters column this week, Paul Sullivan considers the various surveys and analyses done of and for the rich. He says all the time and money put to looking at the wealthy, particularly when most people are feeling anything but wealthy, raises questions about the value of the information. Could anything from the various reports help others?

The reports he cites look at issues as diverse as the number of wealthy people, the changes in their investments in the last year and their concerns about the global and domestic economies.

Have you found that knowing how the rich act has affected your behavior, whether you’re following their lead or taking the opposite path?

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=a2aca0ffe372c4b4d7a45c25848eca19

Prescriptions: Blue Shield of California Vows to Cap Profits

Blue Shield of California, a not-for-profit health insurer based in San Francisco, is promising to limit its profits and give the bulk of any excess income it makes back to policyholders who are buying coverage.

The insurer’s chief executive, Bruce Bodaken, made the announcement on Tuesday in an opinion piece in the San Francisco Chronicle.

The insurer has recently come under sharp criticism for steep hikes in the amount it charges for its policies as well as how much it pays Mr. Bodaken.

Blue Shield was an early proponent of an overhaul of the health insurance industry, and the insurer said it knew its decision was not an answer to the problem of how to cover people when the cost of coverage was so high.

In the opinion piece, Mr. Bodaken says the insurer plans to cap its profits at 2 percent of its revenues. If in any given year it makes more money because the cost of providing health care was lower than it expected or because it made more money from its investments, Blue Shield says it will give the excess back to the community.

Blue Shield is starting with the $180 million of excess profits it made last year — $167 million will go to policyholders, $10 million to hospitals and doctors that try new ways of delivering better coordinated care and $3 million to its own foundation.

Will other not-for-profit insurers follow suit?

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=2585a4cd968b773f89c2ac68bfd59eb2

Your Money: Investment Advice for Small Fry

We buy when prices are high and sell just as the markets are bottoming out. Or we cannot bring ourselves to sell investments that have done well to buy more of what hasn’t. Or we buy on impulse, picking up individual stocks of companies we like and think we understand without much regard for how they may fit into an overall investing strategy.

Some of this behavior springs from a red-blooded insistence that we are all above average and can easily pick stocks and other investments that will outperform the market.

But our collective failure is also a result of the fact that we are literally left to our own devices. Advice from a human being is sorely lacking when we sign up for workplace retirement plans, and there is a severe shortage of moderately priced financial advisers who will help nonmillionaires and put customers’ interests ahead of their own.

Someone will make a lot of money by coming up with a streamlined way to serve these investors, and two services called Betterment and Flat Fee Portfolios are among the latest to try.

Betterment is notable for an almost radical simplicity and its insistence that even someone with just $1,000 is welcome. The Flat Fee Portfolios model is built around a fixed price for advice no matter how big your portfolio is — a far cry from the usual method of having customers pay, say, 1 percent of their assets each year in fees to the adviser.

Neither one may have cracked the code, but they are different enough from most of what’s come before to be worth a look for those of us who recognize that we are constitutionally incapable of managing our own money.

First, a bit more about Betterment, which began operations last year. Once you decide how much to invest, you have only one choice to make: the amount of risk you want to take on. Once you’ve figured that out, there is just one portfolio to invest in (a mix of exchange-traded funds, which are index-fundlike investments that Betterment makes in United States stocks and government bonds).

The company lets anyone use the service, which is admirable in an industry where many financial advisers won’t work with you unless you have more than $500,000 or $1 million, and even “discount” brokers may not manage your money for you unless you meet some kind of account balance minimum.

Betterment is pretty costly, on a percentage basis, for people with less than $25,000, though. Customers pay 0.9 percent in annual fees, which the company takes out of their investment account. The fee declines in three incremental tiers from there. For any money beyond $500,000, the fee is 0.3 percent.

Betterment’s portfolio consists of six United States stock funds and two bond funds, which invest in short-term Treasury bonds and inflation-protected bonds. The company makes its portfolio public on its Web site, so there is nothing stopping you from mimicking it on your own. The company charges no trading fees beyond its annual fees, however, and it rebalances your portfolio for you. So Betterment is betting that enough people are willing to turn everything over to its service and will pay for the privilege.

But Betterment has two glaring weaknesses. First, there are no individual retirement accounts available, so you can’t set up a Roth I.R.A. there or roll over money from a retirement plan you have at a former employer. Second, the portfolio has no international stock funds, a risky choice given all the questions about the American economy. Betterment’s chief executive, Jon Stein, says the company will fix both of these problems this year.

He remains insistent, however, about sticking to just one blueprint for customers’ investments. “We don’t want to break that glass box and start having multiple portfolios,” he said. “People will start picking things that have gone up the most recently, and that is a terrible choice. We want to be simple.”

Flat Fee Portfolios offers a few more investment choices and even simpler pricing than Betterment. It’s also aimed at more affluent customers, people who have six figures in money to invest but don’t have the kind of broader financial planning needs that might merit an adviser who charges more money.

The fee is $199 a month if you have more than $250,000, and it does not grow no matter how much money you have. If you have less than that, you can enroll in a different program with fewer choices and less service for $129 a month.

At the $199 level, you can choose among three types of portfolios. There is one made up of actively managed mutual funds, an indexed portfolio of passively managed funds like the one that Betterment offers, or a portfolio that is more tactical and temporarily moves money to the sidelines when the markets get crazy. A real human adviser reviews your investments with you twice a year, and Flat Fee does the trades for you. At the $129 level, the portfolios are simpler and fewer in number and you have only one meeting a year.

Mark A. Cortazzo, Flat Fee’s founder, named the service after the price offering in an attempt to hint at its conflict-free nature. Like a growing number of investment advisers, Flat Fee earns money only from customers, not from commissions from mutual fund companies.

But even that is no guarantee of a lack of conflicts. “If you have half a million dollars and I’m charging you 1.5 percent of your assets each year, and you call me wanting to take $100,000 to pay off your mortgage, the advice you are getting is conflicted,” he said.

That is not how pricing usually works when advisers charge annual fees to customers. A financial services software company called PriceMetrix recently surveyed its clients who charge annual fees, from Morgan Stanley on down to smaller firms. It found that 37 percent of individual advisers were charging management fees of more than 1.5 percent a year on portfolios of $250,000 to $500,000 that have an even mix of stocks and bonds. Meanwhile, just 23 percent levy fees of less than 1 percent.

“There is no typical price,” said Doug Trott, the president and chief executive of PriceMetrix. “It’s a well-supplied industry, but it’s not very competitive.”

Whether Betterment and Flat Fee Portfolios can afford to stay in business in the lower pricing tiers is an open question. Betterment has about 4,000 accounts but the average balance is roughly $5,000 right now. It’s hard to imagine that it will ever make money unless it attracts many more people.

Mr. Cortazzo, of Flat Fee Portfolios, said he had already made investments in the six figures in staff and his Web site, and he figured he would be spending more than he made for at least 18 months more. His financial planning firm, Macro Consulting Group, has $500 million under management; profits from that line of business allow him to invest in the Flat Fee part of the operation.

But he says he believes that his challenge is more about streamlining his service and efficiently finding his target customer than it is about competition. “Most small advisory firms don’t have the staying power to get to critical mass to make this profitable,” he said. “And the big financial services firms who could do this would cannibalize their existing business by coming up with model-based solutions with lower costs.”

That said, there are some similar services. I’ve written about MarketRiders and AssetBuilder in the past. Folio Investing is another one worth considering.

Meanwhile, Vanguard, Fidelity, Charles Schwab, TD Ameritrade and E*Trade all have their own offerings. If you’re considering any of them, check the fees and ask whether there’s an investment minimum, whether they will trade and rebalance for you and whether they’re using the very best funds or ones that the firm has created. (As usual, links to every service I’ve mentioned are in the online version of this column.)

Again, it’s not at all clear which of these services, if any, is built to last. But their proliferation is a welcome development at a time when the number of advisers and institutions interested in helping people with smaller balances continues to shrink.

“A whole segment of customers is being dislocated,” Mr. Trott said. “And there will be new opportunities for companies to satisfy their demands.”

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=69c0f01ca99df79fc5868c93ace4c371

Your Money: Two Takes on Lower-Cost Investment Management

We buy when prices are high and sell just as the markets are bottoming out. Or we cannot bring ourselves to sell investments that have done well to buy more of what hasn’t. Or we buy on impulse, picking up individual stocks of companies we like and think we understand without much regard for how they may fit into an overall investing strategy.

Some of this behavior springs from a red-blooded insistence that we are all above average and can easily pick stocks and other investments that will outperform the market.

But our collective failure is also a result of the fact that we are literally left to our own devices. Advice from a human being is sorely lacking when we sign up for workplace retirement plans, and there is a severe shortage of moderately priced financial advisers who will help nonmillionaires and put customers’ interests ahead of their own.

Someone will make a lot of money by coming up with a streamlined way to serve these investors, and two services called Betterment and Flat Fee Portfolios are among the latest to try.

Betterment is notable for an almost radical simplicity and its insistence that even someone with just $1,000 is welcome. The Flat Fee Portfolios model is built around a fixed price for advice no matter how big your portfolio is — a far cry from the usual method of having customers pay, say, 1 percent of their assets each year in fees to the adviser.

Neither one may have cracked the code, but they are different enough from most of what’s come before to be worth a look for those of us who recognize that we are constitutionally incapable of managing our own money.

First, a bit more about Betterment, which began operations last year. Once you decide how much to invest, you have only one choice to make: the amount of risk you want to take on. Once you’ve figured that out, there is just one portfolio to invest in (a mix of exchange-traded funds, which are index-fundlike investments that Betterment makes in United States stocks and government bonds).

The company lets anyone use the service, which is admirable in an industry where many financial advisers won’t work with you unless you have more than $500,000 or $1 million, and even “discount” brokers may not manage your money for you unless you meet some kind of account balance minimum.

Betterment is pretty costly, on a percentage basis, for people with less than $25,000, though. Customers pay 0.9 percent in annual fees, which the company takes out of their investment account. The fee declines in three incremental tiers from there. For any money beyond $500,000, the fee is 0.3 percent.

Betterment’s portfolio consists of six United States stock funds and two bond funds, which invest in short-term Treasury bonds and inflation-protected bonds. The company makes its portfolio public on its Web site, so there is nothing stopping you from mimicking it on your own. The company charges no trading fees beyond its annual fees, however, and it rebalances your portfolio for you. So Betterment is betting that enough people are willing to turn everything over to its service and will pay for the privilege.

But Betterment has two glaring weaknesses. First, there are no individual retirement accounts available, so you can’t set up a Roth I.R.A. there or roll over money from a retirement plan you have at a former employer. Second, the portfolio has no international stock funds, a risky choice given all the questions about the American economy. Betterment’s chief executive, Jon Stein, says the company will fix both of these problems this year.

He remains insistent, however, about sticking to just one blueprint for customers’ investments. “We don’t want to break that glass box and start having multiple portfolios,” he said. “People will start picking things that have gone up the most recently, and that is a terrible choice. We want to be simple.”

Flat Fee Portfolios offers a few more investment choices and even simpler pricing than Betterment. It’s also aimed at more affluent customers, people who have six figures in money to invest but don’t have the kind of broader financial planning needs that might merit an adviser who charges more money.

The fee is $199 a month if you have more than $250,000, and it does not grow no matter how much money you have. If you have less than that, you can enroll in a different program with fewer choices and less service for $129 a month.

At the $199 level, you can choose among three types of portfolios. There is one made up of actively managed mutual funds, an indexed portfolio of passively managed funds like the one that Betterment offers, or a portfolio that is more tactical and temporarily moves money to the sidelines when the markets get crazy. A real human adviser reviews your investments with you twice a year, and Flat Fee does the trades for you. At the $129 level, the portfolios are simpler and fewer in number and you have only one meeting a year.

Mark A. Cortazzo, Flat Fee’s founder, named the service after the price offering in an attempt to hint at its conflict-free nature. Like a growing number of investment advisers, Flat Fee earns money only from customers, not from commissions from mutual fund companies.

But even that is no guarantee of a lack of conflicts. “If you have half a million dollars and I’m charging you 1.5 percent of your assets each year, and you call me wanting to take $100,000 to pay off your mortgage, the advice you are getting is conflicted,” he said.

That is not how pricing usually works when advisers charge annual fees to customers. A financial services software company called PriceMetrix recently surveyed its clients who charge annual fees, from Morgan Stanley on down to smaller firms. It found that 37 percent of individual advisers were charging management fees of more than 1.5 percent a year on portfolios of $250,000 to $500,000 that have an even mix of stocks and bonds. Meanwhile, just 23 percent levy fees of less than 1 percent.

“There is no typical price,” said Doug Trott, the president and chief executive of PriceMetrix. “It’s a well-supplied industry, but it’s not very competitive.”

Whether Betterment and Flat Fee Portfolios can afford to stay in business in the lower pricing tiers is an open question. Betterment has about 4,000 accounts but the average balance is roughly $5,000 right now. It’s hard to imagine that it will ever make money unless it attracts many more people.

Mr. Cortazzo, of Flat Fee Portfolios, said he had already made investments in the six figures in staff and his Web site, and he figured he would be spending more than he made for at least 18 months more. His financial planning firm, Macro Consulting Group, has $500 million under management; profits from that line of business allow him to invest in the Flat Fee part of the operation.

But he says he believes that his challenge is more about streamlining his service and efficiently finding his target customer than it is about competition. “Most small advisory firms don’t have the staying power to get to critical mass to make this profitable,” he said. “And the big financial services firms who could do this would cannibalize their existing business by coming up with model-based solutions with lower costs.”

That said, there are some similar services. I’ve written about MarketRiders and AssetBuilder in the past. Folio Investing is another one worth considering.

Meanwhile, Vanguard, Fidelity, Charles Schwab, TD Ameritrade and E*Trade all have their own offerings. If you’re considering any of them, check the fees and ask whether there’s an investment minimum, whether they will trade and rebalance for you and whether they’re using the very best funds or ones that the firm has created. (As usual, links to every service I’ve mentioned are in the online version of this column.)

Again, it’s not at all clear which of these services, if any, is built to last. But their proliferation is a welcome development at a time when the number of advisers and institutions interested in helping people with smaller balances continues to shrink.

“A whole segment of customers is being dislocated,” Mr. Trott said. “And there will be new opportunities for companies to satisfy their demands.”

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=a9867ce1a644112e687531b6883948d4

Bernanke Discusses Federal Role in Research

“We know less than we would like about which policies work best,” Mr. Bernanke said in remarks to a conference on innovation at Georgetown University.

Mr. Bernanke listed options available: direct financing to research institutions, grants to universities or private sector researchers, contracts for specific projects and tax incentives. But he offered no preference to which is best. That varies based on the type of project, he said.

The federal government accounted for roughly 26 percent of total spending on research and development in the United States in 2008. That’s down from around 50 percent in the previous three decades.

Mr. Bernanke also said that government support for research and development financing was most effective if seen as a long-term investment in the economy.

Lags from basic research to commercial applications that can benefit the economy can be very long, he said. For instance, the Internet revolution of the 1990s was based on scientific investments made in the 1970s and 1980s.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=d6fd31dcca86e53a93db12c9f9a28a96