Category Archives: oud

Are Robos Fiduciaries When They Provide Financial Advice And Services For Fees?

Very few investors, individual or institutional, know there are two ethical standards for financial advisors and firms . The higher ethical standard is known as “fiduciary.” Financial advisors, who are registered investment advisors (RIAs) or investment advisor representatives (IARs), are held to this higher ethical standard. It requires advisors and firms to place the financial interests of their clients ahead of their personal interests (make more money). The lower ethical standard is known as “suitability.” Salesmen, for example stockbrokers, are held to this lower standard. They are supposed to make suitable recommendations based on their knowledge of the investors’ circumstances and goals. However, this lower standard is subject to interpretation. For example, three salesmen could have access to the same investor information and make three totally different recommendations. Wall Street prefers a vague ethical standard that is difficult to enforce. Investors are better off with a clear ethical standard that is easy to enforce. Securities and Exchange Commission The SEC is questioning whether robos are financial fiduciaries. This should be a relatively simple decision. The SEC is responsible for regulating financial service firms (RIAs) that provide advice and services for fees. Consider the following: Robos are registered investment advisors (RIAs) Robos provide advice in the form of model portfolios Robo algorithms manage the portfolios Robos have discretionary relationships with their clients Robos are compensated with fees Based on SEC regulations, RIAs are classified as financial fiduciaries. It does not matter if the RIA is a traditional, brick and mortar firm or a robo that delivers advice and services over the Internet. The Robo Exemption Should robos be exempt from fiduciary standards? Absolutely not! They invest client assets in exchange traded funds and other types of pooled investments. In this capacity a robo is acting as a virtual financial advisor; the ETF is the money manager. Financial advisors, who may be RIAs or IARs, are fiduciaries. Therefore, robos are financial fiduciaries. Department of Labor The DOL also has some skin in the fiduciary game. It wants fiduciary status for all advisors who provide investment advice and services to 401(k) plans and IRAs. The DOL believes this requirement will protect American investors from unscrupulous business practices that jeopardize their chances for comfortable, secure retirements. Robos are beginning to provide investment services for 401k plan assets. They also provide robo services for assets in IRAs. Therefore, this DOL mandated ethical standard would apply to robos. Computer Programs Robos did not invent model portfolios. Most financial advisors have used model portfolios to manage their clients’ assets for decades. In fact, the models of robos and advisors are strikingly similar — based on age, risk tolerance, investment horizon, and return objective. What is new is the sophistication of the computer models that run the robos’ model portfolios. Computers are more efficient than humans. Conflicts of Interest Robos will have to act in their clients’ best interests . Models cannot be programmed to buy more expensive, under-performing products Turnover (buys and sells) have to benefit the investor and not the robo There cannot be any hidden or unnecessary expenses The use of proprietary products must be fully disclosed to investors Robo portfolios should not be used as loss leaders Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

‘India The Next China’ For Apple, Says UBS, And iPhone SE Will Help

“India is the next China for Apple ( AAPL ),” says a UBS analyst, who forecasts that the new iPhone SE will help Apple gain market share, albeit still at the high end, in India. Apple has priced the 4-inch iPhone SE starting at $399, about $100 less than expected. But that’s still a high price-tag for most consumers in India, says UBS analyst  Steven Milunovich in a research report. “Some people in developed countries prefer the one-handed 4-inch format, while the lower price attracts emerging-market owners,” wrote Milunovich. “India is the next China for Apple — while the SE price point is high for India, at least it buys new technology now.” The iPhone SE is an update to the 2.5-year-old iPhone 5S. It features upgraded internal components such as an A9 processor and a 12-megapixel camera. Citigroup analyst Jim Suva also says the iPhone SE will boost Apple’s share in India. “Apple currently has 2% share in India for calendar year 2015, and we believe if the company were to increase its market share to be similar to that in China (around 13%) this would increase iPhone units by 15-20 million units,” Suva said in a report. Apple has been investing in India throughout 2015, with a development center in Hyderabad and licenses to launch its own stores in the country. “With the iPhone SE, Apple will not really disrupt the Indian smartphone market but rather try to dominate high-end sales — 77% of smartphone sales in India in 2016 will be below $200,” said Ronan de Renesse, an analyst at U.K.-based Ovum, in a report. China’s slowing economy is a worry for its local smartphone makers as well as Apple. Apple’s December-quarter sales in China rose only 14% from the year-earlier quarter, down from 99% growth the preceding quarter. Xiaomi was the top smartphone seller in China in Q4, with 15% market share, followed closely by Huawei, with Apple in third place.

How To Find The Best Style Mutual Funds: Q1’16

Finding the best mutual funds is an increasingly difficult task in a world with so many to choose from. How can you pick with so many choices available? Don’t Trust Mutual Fund Labels There are at least 929 different Large Cap Value mutual funds and at least 6296 mutual funds across twelve styles. Do investors need 524+ choices on average per style? How different can the mutual funds be? Those 929 Large Cap Value mutual funds are very different. With anywhere from eight to 741 holdings, many of these Large Cap Value mutual funds have drastically different portfolios, creating drastically different investment implications. The same is true for the mutual funds in any other style, as each offers a very different mix of good and bad stocks. Large Cap Blend ranks first for stock selection. Small Cap Growth ranks last. Details on the Best & Worst mutual funds in each style are here . A Recipe for Paralysis By Analysis I think the large number of Large Cap Value (or any other) style mutual funds hurts investors more than it helps because too many options can be paralyzing. It is simply not possible for the majority of investors to properly assess the quality of so many mutual funds. Analyzing mutual funds, done with the proper diligence, is far more difficult than analyzing stocks because it means analyzing all the stocks within each mutual fund. As stated above, that can be as many as 741 stocks, and sometimes even more, for one mutual fund. Any investor focused on fulfilling fiduciary duties recognizes that analyzing the holdings of a mutual fund is critical to finding the best mutual fund. Figure 1 shows our top rated mutual fund for each style. Figure 1: The Best Mutual Fund in Each Style Click to enlarge Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings The Barrow Value Opportunity Fund (MUTF: BALIX ) ranks first, the Brown Advisory Equity Income Fund (MUTF: BAFDX ) ranks second, and the Wall Street Fund (MUTF: WALLX ) ranks third. The Artisan Mid Cap Value Fund (MUTF: APHQX ) ranks last. How To Avoid “The Danger Within” Why do you need to know the holdings of mutual funds before you buy? You need to be sure you do not buy a fund that might blow up. Buying a fund without analyzing its holdings is like buying a stock without analyzing its business and finances. No matter how cheap, if it holds bad stocks, the mutual fund’s performance will be bad. Don’t just take my word for it, see what Barron’s says on this matter. PERFORMANCE OF FUND’S HOLDINGS = PERFORMANCE OF FUND If Only Investors Could Find Funds Rated by Their Holdings… The Vulcan Value Partners Fund (MUTF: VVPLX ) is the top-rated Large Cap Blend mutual fund and the overall top-rated fund of the 6296 style mutual funds that we cover. The mutual funds in Figure 1 all receive an Attractive-or-better rating. However, with so few assets in some of the funds, it is clear investors haven’t identified these quality funds. Disclosure: David Trainer and Kyle Guske II receive no compensation to write about any specific stock, style, or theme. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.