As insurers gain in wealth management race, hurdles remain high

In the long battle to position themselves as wealth managers, life insurance companies still have to prove to financial advisers that they can do more than sell annuities.
DEC 07, 2009
In the long battle to position themselves as wealth managers, life insurance companies still have to prove to financial advisers that they can do more than sell annuities. “There are a number of carriers that have done well in wealth management, including MetLife Inc., Axa [Financial Inc.] and ING [Groep NV],” said Garth A. Bernard, president and chief executive of Sharper Financial Group, a consulting firm that specializes in marketing and developing retirement products. “The good news is that on the investment management side, there's been some bloodshed from the impact of the last 18 months.” The economic downturn not only shook up asset management firms and wirehouses, but it also altered their conception of wealth management services. Whereas the term “wealth management” once referred to the accumulation of assets, industry experts now think that it will encompass retirement income products and the melding of advice with solutions. However, the path to success on the wealth management side — a renewed area of focus for The Hartford Financial Services Group Inc.'s new chief executive, Liam E. McGee — is beset with obstacles for insurers, including the difficulties of finding opportunities through effectively combining advice and attractive products.

FIGHT FOR ATTENTION

A challenge that is universal to wealth management providers is the fight to maintain investors' attention as they retire. “People tend to shrink the number of advisers and firms they deal with,” said Elvin Turner, managing director of Turner Consulting LLC. “Those left standing get more assets.” A strong distribution network is the key to being the wealth management provider that makes a strong impression on advisers and clients, he said. “If you get the network excited and you adequately support it, then you can put in 529s and retirement plans, and adapt it to your distributors,” Mr. Turner said. Those with a large force of wholesalers who have an intimate knowledge of product offerings, and can help advisers find ways to implement them in plans, will make a splash within the independent channel, industry experts said. Advisers agree. “Because you have a working relationship with this person you trust, you pay attention when they offer you a new product,” said Stephen F. Lovell, an adviser at Forsyth Heritage, an LPL Financial affiliate.
Aside from having a troop of wholesalers, insurers that are poised to succeed in wealth management have their own broker-dealers and registered-investment-adviser arms, as well as an open-platform product structure, Mr. Bernard said. “You don't need your own mutual funds, because at the end of the day, it's just a vehicle for accumulating or distributing wealth,” he said. “There's investment advice or insurance advice, but very few players are bringing the two together, and that's one of the things that represents an opportunity to win more assets in the marketplace.” Experts pointed to MetLife as an insurer that not only covered its bases on the product front but also encouraged the registered representatives at its four broker-dealers to take a more holistic approach when giving retirement advice. “You can't just be someone who knows the annuities; you have to be able to talk about investment needs, credit needs and, in our case, protection needs,” said John J. Brett, senior vice president of MetLife's broker-dealer group. Just this past summer, the company launched an updated version of its wealth management platform, which has some $4.9 billion in plan assets and allows reps to view and manage clients' annuities, life insurance and investments. MetLife recently rolled out another version of that platform that is built around mutual funds and has a lower account minimum. “In our broker-dealer, we have reps who spend their time focusing on their securities business, whereas we have others who do insurance and spend little time on investments,” Mr. Brett said. “The cross-selling is key.” More than just a hot product is needed to put insurers higher in the wealth management ranks. Independent advisers who look to insurers for only insurance products have placed compelling product design, cost and especially financial strength at the top of their list. “Independent brokers are going to be careful of who they place business with now, and it's going to take time for them to go back to a company they feel has burned them,” said Scott DeMonte, director of guaranteed-income products and insurance research at Financial Research Corp. Amid tough times, Gregory L. Olsen, a partner at Lenox Advisors Inc., said he turned to Jackson National Life Insurance Co., while other advisers, including Mr. Lovell, did more business with Prudential Financial Inc. Prudential managed to climb the Morningstar Annuity Research Center rankings list of annuity sellers, taking third place for the second quarter of the year. Five years ago, it was 10th.

BANKING ON BONDS

Jacob Herschler, vice president of business strategy for Prudential's annuities unit, attributed the gain to the company's Highest Daily guaranteed-income benefit, which includes a feature that moves a portion of a variable annuity's account value into an investment-grade-bond portfolio under certain conditions. Mr. Turner noted that it's still too soon to find out which carrier is the best or, more accurately, which one came through the 2008 crisis the strongest. Third-quarter earnings will give some indications as to which company came out on top in asset growth. “At the multiline firms, you get a mixed bag, with some products doing very well,” Mr. Turner said. “The issue is, what product carries the day? Which product was so strong that it lifted overall results?” E-mail Darla Mercado at [email protected].

Latest News

Northern Trust names new West Region president for wealth
Northern Trust names new West Region president for wealth

The new regional leader brings nearly 25 years of experience as the firm seeks to tap a complex and evolving market.

Capital Group extends retirement plan services further with a focus on advisors
Capital Group extends retirement plan services further with a focus on advisors

The latest updates to its recordkeeping platform, including a solution originally developed for one large 20,000-advisor client, take aim at the small to medium-sized business space.

Why RIAs are the next growth frontier for annuities
Why RIAs are the next growth frontier for annuities

David Lau, founder and CEO of DPL Financial Partners, explains how the RIA boom and product innovation has fueled a slow-burn growth story in annuities.

Supreme Court slaps down challenge to IRS summons for Coinbase user data
Supreme Court slaps down challenge to IRS summons for Coinbase user data

Crypto investor argues the federal agency's probe, upheld by a federal appeals court, would "strip millions of Americans of meaningful privacy protections."

Houston-based RIA Americana Partners adds $1B+ with former Morgan Stanley director
Houston-based RIA Americana Partners adds $1B+ with former Morgan Stanley director

Meanwhile in Chicago, the wirehouse also lost another $454 million team as a group of defectors moved to Wells Fargo.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.