Skandia launches multi-manager funds
Australian Skandia has taken two new fund-of-funds to the retail market, with plans to make them available to the wholesale market at the end of the year.
Skandia today launched the Skandia Blended Australian Shares Fund and the Skandia Blended Global Shares Fund. The Skandia Blended fund will take on Maple-Brown Abbott, Schroder and Deutsche, each to manage 30 per cent of the portfolio in Australian shares, and Investors Mutual, which will be allocated a 10 per cent slice.
Skandia’s global fund will be weighted 34 per cent to hedged and 66 per cent to foreign currency. The regional breakdown is 34 per cent global, a 34.32 per cent skew to North America, and the remaining 31.68 per cent investing in other regions of the globe. The funds selected for the multi-manager global fund are Barclays, Fidelity, Invesco, Alliance, Marsico and Gabelli.
Skandia managing director Ross Laidlaw says the funds should attract a level of risk appropriate to high growth financial products.
“Unlike our other diversified funds, the new funds are strategically designed to offer exposure to just one asset class. This enables advisers to still determine the asset allocation within their client’s portfolio but diversify away from a single manager,” he says.
Mercer Investment Consulting determined the strategic asset allocation and manager configuration from each of the Skandia Global Access Portfolios, which the two new funds comprise.
The two new funds can be added to Skandia’s existing five diversified 40-plus discretionary options by advisers, who can use ready-made portfolios or create their own, Laidlaw says.
Skandia has more than $185 billion in assets globally.
Recommended for you
Digital advice tools are on the rise, but licensees will need to ensure they still meet adviser obligations or potentially risk a class action if clients lose money from a rogue algorithm.
Shaw and Partners has merged with Sydney wealth manager Kennedy Partners Wealth, while Ord Minnett has hired a private wealth adviser from Morgan Stanley.
Australian investors are more confident than their APAC peers in reaching their financial goals and are targeting annual gains of more than 10 per cent, according to Fidelity International.
Zenith Investment Partners has lost its head of portfolio solutions Steven Tang after 17 years with the firm, the latest in a series of senior exits from the research house.