Thursday 24 May 2018

Why RIA Custodians Should Start Charging A Basis Point Custody Fee

A custodian is one of the most crucial vendors for RIAs that manage client assets. From the core custodial services of trading and holding and keeping records of electronically-owned securities, to the ancillary technology that custodians provide to help advisors run their business, a good RIA custodial relationship can help firms attract and retain clients. However, as the advisory industry has shifted from a focus on sales to advice, custodians and the RIAs they serve are increasingly in conflict with one another, as many of the ways in which RIAs can help their clients reduce costs and further grow their wealth (reducing unnecessary trading costs, seeking out the best cash options, etc.) are actually detrimental to the bottom lines of the RIA custodians they use!

In this week’s #OfficeHours with @MichaelKitces, my Tuesday 1PM EST broadcast via Periscope, we discuss why RIA custodians should start charging the RIAs they serve a custody fee, and why a basis-point custody fee would ultimately better align the interests of RIAs and the custodians that serve them, allowing custodians to actually focus on providing the best services and solutions to RIAs, instead of just seeking new ways to make money off of an RIA’s clients instead! 

To better understand why an RIA custody fee would be an improvement relative to the status quo, it is helpful to first look at how RIA custodial platforms actually make their money in the first place. In practice, most RIA custodians make money in three ways: (1) earning money on cash (either through the expense ratio of a proprietary money market fund, or by sweeping the cash to a related bank subsidiary), (2) servicing fees for mutual funds and ETFs, such as sub-TA fees along with 12b-1s via “No Transaction Fee” (NTF) platforms, and (3) ticket charges earned whenever a client makes a trade. In practice, many of these fees may ultimately be trivial to the end consumer (e.g., it’s unlikely a 50 basis point fee on a 1% cash position is going to make or break a client’s retirement), but when companies like Charles Schwab have almost 1.5 trillion dollars on their RIA platform, these expenses result in substantial revenues for RIA platforms when aggregated across all clients… albeit at the direct expense to the client.

And the reason this structure matters is that it means RIA custodians are fundamentally misaligned with the advisors they serve. Because a situation is created where we as RIAs create value for our clients by trying to systematically dismantle the custodian’s revenue and profit lines! Instead of just leaving cash in whatever money market fund is available, we look for ways to reduce cash balances or shift that cash to institutions that best compensate our clients for holding cash. Instead of using an NTF fund with a higher expense ratio, we’ll shift our client’s assets to a non-NTF fund when the ticket charge will reduce costs for them (or vice-versa). And unlike broker-dealers who stand to profit from increased trading (by marking up the ticket charges for themselves), RIAs try to reduce trading costs by helping clients avoid unnecessary trading. In short, the problem is that as RIAs, custodians have put us in the position where we look better by sticking it to the custodian… and the more we manage to ‘play the game’ and dismantle the custodian’s profit centers, the more money we save our clients, and the better we look to our clients!

And this is why the future of the RIA custody business will eventually be RIAs simply paying a basis point custody fee to the RIA custodian instead. Which is a huge leap relative to the “free” that we as RIAs currently enjoy with our custodians… but basis point custodial fees would actually be better for all of us in the long run! Suppose RIA custodians charged 10 basis points, tiering down to 7, 5, and then 3 basis points for large firms (intended to simply approximate what they already make off of RIA clients on average). If custodians did this in lieu of making money off of our clients, now their incentive is not to try and figure out how they can make more money off of our clients, but instead to truly create the best RIA custody platform out there for gathering client assets! With a custody fee in place, RIA custodians could then pay better rates on money market funds, eliminate ticket charges that annoy our clients (and time spent by advisors devising ways around ticket charges for our clients), and eliminate both 12b-1 fees and sub-TA fees, instead providing a new version of truly “clean shares” that strip out all back-end fees (regardless of what fund company is used). In other words, once the RIA custodian gets an RIA custody fee, the custodian is freed up to actually give us as advisors the best possible solutions for our clients!

Of course, there may be some challenges in getting RIAs to adopt such a model, particularly given that a subset of RIAs – namely those that use buy and hold portfolios for clients and actively seek ways to get clients the best deal on cash holdings – are already paying less (as they’re effectively subsidized by the RIAs that do not use such strategies!).

But the bottom line is just to recognize that, in the long-run, both RIAs and the custodial platforms they use would be better off with custodians charging a basis point custody fee, rather than just looking for ways to make money off of our clients. Even though it may feel really awkward to us when we’re not using to paying that custody fee, it will ultimately be better, both for the custodian and for the RIA itself, by properly aligning their interests… which means, in the end, it’s better for the client, too!

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source https://www.kitces.com/blog/ria-custodian-basis-point-custody-fee-for-platform-and-better-products/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=ria-custodian-basis-point-custody-fee-for-platform-and-better-products

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