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Generali to disrupt active asset management market

Venture with ex-Alliance Bernstein chief to undercut rivals on fees

Opportunities and risk in disruption

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Aperture Investors was launched on Thursday and is the brainchild of ex-Alliance Bernstein chief executive Peter Kraus and Italian insurance business Generali, which will provide $4bn (£3bn, €3.4bn) to get the firm off the ground.

Aperture will be headquartered in New York, with Kraus acting as chief executive and chairman.

Joining him will be JP Morgan’s former global head of fixed income, David Saab, who took the opportunity to criticise the industry’s focus on asset gathering.

Saab will be stepping in to oversee the firm’s international business as managing director in November. He was the global head of fixed income and absolute return funds at JPM Private Bank and before that was a portfolio manager at Banque Privee Edmond de Rothschild.

He will be based in London.

Putting clients above asset gathering

Speaking to our sister publication Portfolio Adviser, Saab said he was attracted to Aperture because of the emphasis placed on aligning client interest with the goals of the firm.

“I realised that the asset management industry today is more interested in asset gathering than in trying to find what is suitable for the client and make an alignment between their interests and what the firm is doing.”

Saab said Aperture’s fee structure is a unique proposition particularly in the US market.

Strategies will charge “ETF-like fees”, which can which can only go higher when managers beat their benchmarks. As outperformance is generated each strategy is charged a performance-linked fee of 30% on returns generated.

In another departure from a fixed-fee structure, managers will be paid a “modest base compensation” and can only earn more when they generate outperformance. Active managers’ compensation is typically proportional to the volume of assets they managed.

Managers and their investment teams are entitled to 35% of the firm’s performance-linked fees paid on realised outperformance or 10.5% of total outperformance.

Funds will also have a clawback mechanism to ensure that the firm’s profitability is dependent on whether clients receive returns in excess of the benchmark over the long-run. In other words, if a manager generates alpha in the first year and negative alpha over the next two to three years, the money they were supposed to receive as part of the first year performance will go back into the fund.

Asset growth over outperformance 

Kraus said the asset management industry is “long overdue for disruption” arguing that fixed fees have led to years of poor performance and eroded client trust in active management.

“There are currently too many active managers managing too much money. Fixed fees and a lack of real capacity constraints have long incentivised managers to grow assets under management rather than pursue outperformance.”

Kraus was responsible for pushing performance-linked funds at Alliance Bernstein.

He was ousted after nearly a decade at the firm in April 2017 by parent company French insurer Axa who reportedly disagreed with his management style and succession plans.

Before that he had built a name for himself during his 22-year career at Goldman Sachs where he eventually became global co-head of the group’s investment management arm.

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