Advisors using alternatives still a minority despite business case, says Fuse

Advisors using alternatives still a minority despite business case, says Fuse
Adoption of emerging structures such as interval funds and BDCs remains low.
DEC 01, 2023

Alternative strategies and vehicle structures remain the domain of only a small minority of advisors, according to a new report.

While asset managers have been focused on these products for some time, and high-net-worth and institutional investors have been using them for decades, their presence in the retail space is expanding.

However, Fuse Research Network’s Advisor Trend Monitor Series Report found that adoption remains relatively low among financial advisors.

Almost one-third (31%) of advisors polled for the research use REITs within client portfolios with an average allocation of 5%, while the only other structures used by at least one in ten advisors are private equity and hedge funds.

“A segment of advisors is embracing alternative product structures; however, it remains a minority,” said Mike Evans, director of benchmark research at Fuse. “The overall usage of emerging structures like interval funds and BDCs is limited. This trend is also true for hedge funds, private equity, and private debt.”

BUSINESS CASE

The share of advisors using business development companies — a type of closed-end fund that makes investments in developing and financially distressed firms, typically using heavy leverage — is 9.7% with an average allocation of 3.9%.

For private debt, 8.6% of advisors include this in their client portfolios with an average allocation of 5.2%, and 7.4% of advisors use interval or tender offer funds with an average allocation of 5%.

Evans added that the business case for advisors expanding their use of alternative structures is clear. “The underlying demographics of advisors using these products are highly favorable — larger books of business, more experience and likely a team structure with dedicated due diligence,” he explained. “Firms must take a deliberate approach with any alternative vehicles because the sales cycle will be significantly longer.”

Latest News

Bankrupt Inspired Healthcare’s CEO fighting for lawyer’s fees
Bankrupt Inspired Healthcare’s CEO fighting for lawyer’s fees

Luke Lee launched the company in 2016. It eventually issued $1.2 billion high-risk investments.

Edward Jones takes minority stake in personal finance app Quicken
Edward Jones takes minority stake in personal finance app Quicken

The company aims to bring Quicken's budgeting and investment tool tracking to its 20,000-plus advisor network

BlackRock finds growing gap between retirement confidence and reality
BlackRock finds growing gap between retirement confidence and reality

Americans may feel better about retirement, but new research suggests confidence and preparedness aren’t always the same thing.

'Family office' sold $40 million in notes without a broker license, SEC alleges
'Family office' sold $40 million in notes without a broker license, SEC alleges

A $2.97 million commission haul and rolled-over retirement money sit at the center.

SEC alleges unregistered seller raised $10 million from 190 investors
SEC alleges unregistered seller raised $10 million from 190 investors

He sold "safe" notes on his radio show. The SEC says he was never licensed.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.