FlexiPlan's $6 billion man: Mulcahy's five year plan

master trusts morningstar director

10 April 1999
| By Samantha Walker |

With less than a month in the managing director seat, Garry Mulcahy has already set his sights on new opportunities for the FlexiPlan master trust operations. Samantha Walker explores some of those plans.

With less than a month in the managing director seat, Garry Mulcahy has already set his sights on new opportunities for the FlexiPlan master trust operations. Samantha Walker explores some of those plans.

Garry Mulcahy has big plans for FlexiPlan. In five short years, he reckons he can build a business with $7 billion under administration, more than tripling its current $1.65 billion under administration.

Others at MLC think it's a done deal. MLC recently bought the last significant tranche of shares in Perth-based FlexiPlan, purchasing the last 20 per cent from founder and former managing director Sue Thomas.

Thomas says she will stay with the group in a consulting role, leav-ing Mulcahy, who was previously project director of MLC's MasterKey product, as FlexiPlan's new managing director.

FlexiPlan has been at the forefront in the development of master trusts in Australia. It was FlexiPlan, along with another Perth-based master trust Asgard, which cornered the market in the early 1990s. And recent Morningstar figures suggest that the players have retained market dominance, with both Asgard and FlexiPlan ranking in the top three in fund inflows for the three months to the end of March. In fact, the same Morningstar figures show an 83 per cent rise in funds under administration for FlexiPlan in the past year, the fastest growth of the 25 master trusts surveyed.

FlexiPlan offers particular expertise in the superannuation market, through its private deed service for self-managed funds and its pub-lic offer FlexiSuper Fund.

Mulcahy says MLC bought FlexiPlan to provide a broad range of serv-ices to the adviser market. He says FlexiPlan is well positioned to take advantage of both its own product developments and MLC's vast distribution capabilities.

"We see FlexiPlan not so much as a product, but more an enabling service for advisers and we'll be continuing to develop enhancements to the business to maintain its rapid growth rate," he says.

In June 1996, before MLC began its gradual acquisition of the busi-ness, about 150 advisers used FlexiPlan. Since then, MLC says the number of advisers supporting the business has grown to more than 850.

MLC's own brand distribution network includes 1,200 advisers from the four MLC-owned dealerships - MLC Financial Planning, Garvan Financial Planning, Lend Lease Adviser Financial Planning and Godfrey Pembroke. It also includes 2,000 independent advisers currently using MLC's products.

"FlexiPlan is currently used by both MLC aligned distribution net-works as well as by independents. The bulk of the money, though, is currently coming through from the independents," Mulcahy says.

Mulcahy says the challenge for FlexiPlan is: "to make sure the offer-ing is attractive enough for advisers".

Mulcahy acknowledges that his involvement in the development of MLC's MasterKey product played an important part in his appointment to the top job at FlexiPlan. He says the recent launch of MasterKey posi-tioned MLC's retail products alongside, but not in competition with, FlexiPlan.

"That's our deliberate strategy - to have both FlexiPlan and Mas-terKey positioned in the market so that they are complementing each other. It would be ridiculous to have it otherwise. You might find the same adviser using both for different clients, because of the particular needs of the client. I think one of the reasons why I was appointed to this role was because I've got a very clear understand-ing of where both FlexiPlan and MasterKey are positioned in the mar-ket. It is not our intention to overlap the businesses," he says.

Mulcahy says part of FlexiPlan's rapid growth will come about from a series of product enhancements, though MLC will not be "inflicting anything on FlexiPlan". Instead it will leave the business largely to its own management.

Currently on the drawing board at FlexiPlan is an e-commerce capabil-ity, which Mulcahy says will draw on the strength of FlexiPlan's IT systems.

"E-commerce is being worked on now, though it's such a big animal and consequently, we're moving on it in a gradual process," he says.

While Mulcahy will not rule out FlexiPlan moving into the increas-ingly lucrative corporate superannuation market, he says it is not part of the current business strategy.

This puts it at odds with competitor Asgard, which reportedly hopes to increase its superannuation business from current levels of $100 million to anywhere up to $1 billion in the coming year.

Mulcahy is non-plussed and says that MLC already offers services to these clients.

"MLC currently has a range of product offerings, such as its joint venture with Vanguard, which are aimed at the corporate superannua-tion market. However, if in future there is a need to target this market, we will," he says.

Nonetheless, it is clear that both Mulcahy and MLC are sold on the promise of master trusts in financial services.

"It is part of the evolution of the industry. Advisers are looking for products which provide a range of business services, rather than single products," he says.

Mulcahy believes this will ultimately drive MLC's distribution capa-bilities.

"Planners are getting more clients and less time. That's why we purchased FlexiPlan and that's why we're repositioning MLC's retail products through Mas-terKey. We now feel MLC is pretty well positioned in the market to reap the bene-fits of this."

Read more about:

AUTHOR

 

Recommended for you

 

MARKET INSIGHTS

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

baffled

I don't have any faith in the regulator. I've stopped reading these and just think some poor guy got busted for a spell...

10 hours ago
Chris Cornish

By having trustees supervise client directed payments from their pension funds, Stephen Jones and the federal Labor gove...

3 days 15 hours ago
Chris Cornish

Now we now the size of Stephen Jones' CSOLR tax, I doubt anyone will be employer any new financial adviser from this poi...

3 days 15 hours ago

AustralianSuper and Australian Retirement Trust have posted the financial results for the 2022–23 financial year for their combined 5.3 million members....

10 months 2 weeks ago

A $34 billion fund has come out on top with a 13.3 per cent return in the last 12 months, beating out mega funds like Australian Retirement Trust and Aware Super. ...

10 months ago

The verdict in the class action case against AMP Financial Planning has been delivered in the Federal Court by Justice Moshinsky....

10 months 2 weeks ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND