Assets Out of Management — Challenging 'Assets Under Management'

Posted on July 6, 2010 at 12:46 PM PDT by

A few weeks ago BP CEO, Tony Hayward, felt the heat of America’s ire for his “I want my life back” gaffe. This week, BP Chairman, Carl-Henric Svanberg, may have out done him, commenting before Congress “BP cares about the small people”. After 11 deaths, destruction of Gulf fisheries and a local economy in shambles, the “small people” comment landed on sensitive nerves.

Whether a simple language blunder or insight into the psychology of the rich and powerful, Svanberg’s comments touch on a belief held by many – that in this world there are rules for the privileged and then rules for the rest of us little people, conjuring up memories of the late Leona Helmsley’s famous statement that, “only the little people pay taxes”.

Wall Street is founded on the little people premise. One manifestation is seen in the ubiquitous conversation by wealth managers about AUM or Assets Under Management. AUM is the measuring rod of their success and compensation -a topic of their urbane, cocktail-party banter. Every wealth manager or investment adviser is aware of his AUM as well as that of their friends and competitors because it indicates how much one earns.

Wealth managers trim 1% to 1.5% in fees off of “their” AUM every year. The bigger your retirement account, the more you add to your manager’s AUM and you become a “bigger person” in his eyes. If your account is under $500K, you are likely a little person. Some top managers won’t even answer you’re call if you can’t add $5 million to their AUM.

While AUM is the accepted business model, we have a huge problem with it. What value does a wealth manager add that gives him the right to extract a fixed percent every year off the spoils of your life’s work?

We deliver our advice to all for the same low cost regardless of a portfolio’s size. We treat every investor as a big person. There are no special investors who are on the inside track with access to special insights or favors.

At MarketRiders, we’ve begun measuring our success, in part, by AOM, or Assets Out of Management. We track the amount of draining fees from the AUM game that we’ve helped you escape. This week, we celebrate reaching $500 million of AOM and you — our thousands of investors that are now saving millions in fees. Here’s to no little people!




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