Advisors’ shuffle away from cash reaches its fifth year

Advisors’ shuffle away from cash reaches its fifth year
Advyzon research reveals steady decline in advisors’ cash allocations, along with ETFs’ decisive victory over mutual funds.
JUN 28, 2024

Advyzon has unveiled its third annual asset allocation study shedding light on new trends in financial advisors' investment strategies.

The report titled "What's Going On With Assets in 2024?" delves into the asset allocation choices of over 1,500 advisory firms utilizing Advyzon's portfolio reporting services as of the end of 2023.

A notable trend identified in the 2024 study is the continued reduction in cash allocations by advisors throughout 2023. From north of 10 percent at the end of 2019 when Advyzon first started recording investment data for firms on its platform, cash allocations have gone on a steady decline yearly to reach just 4.6 percent by the end of 2023.

"The end-of-year expectation in 2023 was that the Fed would lower rates six times in 2024,” Brian Huckstep, CIO of AIM, Advyzon's TAMP, said in a statement. “That may have prompted some investors to preemptively exit cash and very short-term bonds to seek better returns in longer-dated bonds or other investments."

This shift might have cost some advisors, however, as they could have missed out on higher-than-average yields from short-term debt and cash equivalents.

Another significant finding in the report is the widening preference for ETFs over mutual funds, with advisors allocating nearly 30 percent to ETFs by the end of 2023, compared to roughly 22 percent to mutual funds.

Explaining the trend, Buckstep pointed to the rise of buffer ETFs designed to mitigate downside risk, effectively putting them in a portfolio turf war against structured notes.

He also noted the growing popularity of lower-priced ETFs, a trend bucked by SPDR's SPY. Despite SPY's higher cost of 0.09 percent, triple the sticker price of Vanguard’s VTI or IVV, the dollars held in SPDR’s ETF remain sticky likely due to long-time investors not wanting to realize the decades’ worth of capital gains they’ve accumulated in the 31-year-old fund.

Advyzon saw a sharp turn to diversification in 2022 with more allocations to alternatives and “other” investments, a trend that continued in 2023. But by the end of last year, it found advisors had 2.3 percent allocated to alternatives – a step down from 2.7 percent at year-end 2022, but still substantially up from less than 1 percent in the years before that.

“[I]t does seem like advisors focused on diversification in 2023, a trend likely to continue as mixed economic conditions persist in 2024,” Advyzon’s new report said.

Among the crosswinds investors are navigating is this year’s presidential election, which will see former president Donald Trump and incumbent President Joe Biden battling for voters’ hearts and minds at the polls.

While investors might be tempted to draw a direct line between sharp movements in the markets and bombs lobbed in the war of words, Kaitlin Hendrix, asset allocation research director at Dimensional Fund Advisors, emphasized the resilience of the stock market across different political landscapes.

"Stocks have rewarded disciplined investors for decades, through both Democratic and Republican presidencies, as shareholders are investing in companies that focus on serving their customers and growing their businesses regardless of who is in the White House," Hendrix said.

Latest News

Edward Jones adds JPMorgan to retirement plan lineup amid widening small business push
Edward Jones adds JPMorgan to retirement plan lineup amid widening small business push

The firm's 11-partner retirement lineup now includes J.P. Morgan and T. Rowe Price, as it targets the underserved small business 401(k) market.

Siebert Financial targets influencer wealth with Miami 'Rich Behavior' events
Siebert Financial targets influencer wealth with Miami 'Rich Behavior' events

The brokerage’s new Miami event series will bring together women content creators and financial advisors to discuss taxes, retirement planning, and business structuring as wealth managers target the fast-growing creator economy.

$3.5B UBS breakaway team launches RIA Beacon Coast Partners
$3.5B UBS breakaway team launches RIA Beacon Coast Partners

Wirehouse vets target founders navigating liquidity events with a new fiduciary firm in San Francisco.

Why high-net-worth clients need to rethink time, health, and wealth
Why high-net-worth clients need to rethink time, health, and wealth

Hightower Signature Wealth's Andrew Connors argues proactive life planning conversations can transform client relationships and create more fulfilling retirement outcomes.

Sen. Warren presses Trump on Social Security retirement age threat
Sen. Warren presses Trump on Social Security retirement age threat

The Massachusetts Democrat is demanding answers from the White House as the trust fund insolvency date accelerates and benefit cuts loom for retirees.

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.