Structured investments add an important dimension in the investment arena, providing wealth managers with compelling compliments or alternatives to traditional investment funds and other investment products.
Growth in the market has been cyclical at certain points over the years, but support has trended upwards over time, dramatically at times. The UK has recently lagged other global markets in its use of structured investments – partly due to distribution factors, ie the UK investment market is dominated by fragmented firms of wealth managers, as opposed to a small number of major institutions.
However, even in the UK, the main target market for Blue Sky Asset Management (BSAM), retail structured investment sales increased by nearly 25 per cent in 2008, resulting in record sales volume just shy of £10bn (E10.63bn), with nearly 100 providers issuing nearly 1000 retail products see (Figure 1).
Against other investment options, including traditional mutual funds, sales growth and volume of this magnitude makes it irrefutably clear that structured products have established themselves as mainstream and value adding investment solutions, that appeal to and are embraced by an ever increasing number of highly opinionated UK wealth managers and advisers.
The diversity of offerings and flexibility to add value in so many ways in portfolios makes structured investments indispensable in the eyes of many leading wealth managers.
However, and exactly as is the case with traditional mutual funds, naturally our view of the industry is that it polarises in terms of different investment approaches and at a provider, product and value level. Sales volume on its own certainly does not automatically reflect investment value or integrity per se, across the board.
We think wealth managers must demonstrate working knowledge, research, due diligence and differentiation, at provider and product level if they are to tap into the structured investment firms and propositions that can maximise investment and client value.
Wealth managers who are assessing and researching the industry, providers and products, need to consider factors that differentiate the different investment approaches on offer. In particular, as the sector booms, they need to think about the hallmarks that characterise different providers and propositions.
“Structured Products” or “Structured Investments”?
The first hallmark is, to our minds, the most obvious – but also the most fundamental. At its most basic, are providers talking ‘products’ or ‘investments’?
The fact is, unfortunately to our minds, that most structured product providers, at least those active in the UK, can be characterised as simply marketing products. In fact, the clue is in the terminology – they promote ‘structured products’ not ‘structured investments’.
It takes all types of providers to make any investment universe function, but typical structured product providers are culturally and fundamentally sales driven, with products pitched on headline rates, and little else.
Talk with a typical provider, look at their business or pull open their product literature and you will presumably be able to find out ‘what’ products they have and ‘what’ their products do, but ask ‘why’ or ‘why a product makes investment sense’, from a
research based, asset allocation driven, portfolio planning perspective and the conversation may dry up rapidly.
Many structured product providers offer nothing more than ‘trigger happy product issuance’ – but try to have an intelligent conversation about investment outlook and silence may quickly replace sales patter.
Research-Backed Investment thinking
The second ‘hallmark’ is critical and identifies or defines a structured investment provider, or structured asset manager – an altogether rarer breed, in an otherwise product driven universe. The hallmark is ‘research-backed investment thinking’.
Optimal investment solutions of any type surely require intelligent investment thinking – and, to our minds, this means research-backed investment thinking. Yet, one of the fundamental differences between mutual funds and structured products is all too obvious. There is an almost total lack of research-backed investment thinking - or even basic investment thinking - within the structured products industry.
Scratch the surface of a typical structured product provider or product and the lack of research-backed investment thinking will probably be immediately apparent. There simply might not be any.
Research can embed investment views in structured investments and give them a purpose and raison d’être, other than sales. A structured investment provider’s first consideration will be identifying compelling investment opportunities - and working with wealth managers to identify and solve portfolio planning/asset allocation needs. A structured product provider will identify cheap derivatives, and then try to find an investment story to wrap around them.
This, to our minds, is the way and reason that many of the structured products coming out of London, Paris, New York, etc, are developed – and is why many structured products look so spurious to wealth managers looking for the investment rationale.







