Global Investing

Guaranteeing against losses

It’s 2002 all over again. Wealth managers are scrambling to get their gunshy clients bank into the market by guaranteeing them there will be no losses, or at least only a few.  They did the same thing after the internet bubble burst.

With many investors still reeling from the November 2007 to March 2009 equities crash, capital protection or guarantee  plans are making a comeback. They generally work like this:

1) An asset is chosen, perhaps a basket of something.  2) A guarantee is ensured by investing a high percentage of the principal in paper — such as a discounted zero coupon bond — that returns all the principal by the end of the product’s life. 3) The remaining money from the principal pays for options up to the full amount of the principal on the underlying asset.

The result is that if the asset rises the options kick in and the returns are made. If it doesn’t nothing is bought and the principal is returned by the maturing paper.

All well and good, but at the moment there is a particularly ironic problem for the wealth managers. They are touting these products to get scared investors out of cash, which has precious little yield.

from Blogs Dashboard:

Wealth education: one pretention too much?

The ultra wealthy have finally found something that is too pretentious.

 

English-style horseback riding lessons? Fine. Summers split between five different country houses? Also fine. 

 

But, how about enforced wealth education for the next generation? As in, teaching the kids how different types of investments actually work and how to enjoy the family fortune without instantly frittering it away? Now that smacks of pretension, especially for the kids, who are used to spending the 'rents riches without having to think too hard about the dirty green stuff itself.

 

“Wealth education for my kids? Well that seems pretty pretentious,” said Wells Fargo Family Wealth managing director of family dynamics Keith Whitaker, describing the feelings of some of his ultra-rich clients at the Reuters Global Wealth Management Summit in Boston.