McGraw-Hill to be renamed S&P Global: No more textbooks, just financial data

McGraw-Hill to be renamed S&P Global: No more textbooks, just financial data
Hopes to change name to S&P Global on Wednesday
APR 29, 2016
McGraw-Hill is putting away the textbooks and focusing solely on financial data that advisers use in their investments and in measuring their clients' progress. Pending shareholder approval Wednesday, the company will re-brand itself as S&P Global, says CEO Doug Peterson. "No more textbooks," Mr. Peterson said. "After the sale of J.D. Power & Associates, we'll be 100% in analytics, data, and benchmarks." Most advisers think of Standard & Poor's as a prime mover among exchange-traded funds: 694 ETFs are benchmarked to S&P indexes, and the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) is the largest ETF linked to the iconic benchmark. Its new retirement indexes, the S&P STRIDE (Shift to Retirement Income and Decumulation) indexes, are a multi-asset class index that transitions from growth to retirement income based on target dates. The series was created in response to the need for indices that can benchmark investment strategies that transition from asset growth to income generation. The asset allocation for each index in the series is based on a predetermined life cycle glide path and each index is fully investable, with varying levels of exposure to equities, nominal fixed income securities, and inflation-adjusted bonds. “It's a way to benchmark retirement outcomes over time,” Mr. Peterson said. McGraw-Hill is also pushing into environmental, social and governmental indexes, currently dominated by MSCI. ESG is an important area for clients who care about the social impact of their investments, particularly for younger investors. The name change to S&P Global was sparked, in part, by McGraw-Hill's $2.23 billion acquisition of SNL Financial, a Charlottesville, Va.-company in 2015. SNL focused on the banking, insurance, energy and real estate industries. McGraw-Hill has had a long and painful journey since the financial crisis, when it was excoriated for awarding top debt ratings to collateralized mortgage-backed securities. The company was unpleasantly reminded of its recent past in The Big Short, the 2015 movie about the financial crisis. McGraw-Hill paid $1.6 billion in 2014 for legal and costs as a result of the financial meltdown, and another $54 million in 2015. Those costs are largely — but not entirely — past, Mr. Peterson said, and the company has worked with regulators to make the company freer from conflicts of interest and move away from its past. “We have higher requirements for AAA debt ratings,” Mr. Peterson said. “We've spent a lot and done a lot to incorporate the lessons we've learned from the crisis. “ (Updates to correct earlier quote in the story to read “sale of J.D. Power & Associates” instead of “spinoff.”)

Latest News

Webull adds mutual funds to IRA accounts in retirement push
Webull adds mutual funds to IRA accounts in retirement push

Platform move gives retirement savers access to professionally managed products in one place.

Supreme Court strengthens SEC power to claw back fraud profits from violators
Supreme Court strengthens SEC power to claw back fraud profits from violators

No investor losses? The SEC can still claw back every dollar of pro

Wirehouse moves: RBC nabs experienced Wells Fargo advisor in New England
Wirehouse moves: RBC nabs experienced Wells Fargo advisor in New England

Plus, Well Fargo hails May recruitment haul totaling more than $3 billion in assets, while UBS recruits a top advisor and women's champion from Lazard.

Robinhood Concierge for millionaire investors nears 60,000 clients
Robinhood Concierge for millionaire investors nears 60,000 clients

Robinhood’s invite-only Concierge unit now serves about 60,000 high-net-worth clients with CFP access, tax planning, and estate planning resources as the retail brokerage expands further into wealth management.

Advisor360, Willow Wealth tap seasoned veterans for C-suite roles
Advisor360, Willow Wealth tap seasoned veterans for C-suite roles

The two wealthtech platforms name new C-level executives as AI-native strategy and private markets growth accelerate across the advice industry

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.