Financial Advisors Growing More Pessimistic About US Economy
Location: Boston
Author:
John Reilly
Date: Thursday, November 17, 2011
Financial advisors have grown decidedly
more pessimistic during 2011, according to the MFS Investing Sentiment
Survey, moving more in line with the declining sentiment of investors.
“But advisors need to laser focus on their clients' life
experiences today, both from an investment standpoint as well as from a
personal and emotional perspective. Investors are burdened by a mounting
weight of socioeconomic concerns and their increased need for advice
reflects a growing uncertainty about their future.”
- 27% of advisors said they were pessimistic about the U.S.
economy over the next five years, up from only 7% back in February
2011.
- Only 45% of advisors surveyed believe U.S. equities are an
excellent or very good place to invest over the next 12 months, down
from 72% in February. Similarly, advisors dropped from 60% to 29%
when asked about international equities.
- 53% of investors are pessimistic about the U.S. economy, up from
37% in February.
- Overall, investors say 27% of their investable assets are in
cash. And younger investors lead the pack, with Generation Y
indicating a 33% allocation to cash, up from 30% in February.
But advisors have to find a way to cut through this wave of pessimism
and meet investors' ever rising need for advice.
- 27% of surveyed investors say their need for professional
financial advice has increased over the past 12 months, up from 21%
in February. Again, younger investors lead the pack, with 45% of
Generation Y and 36% of Generation X indicating an increased need
for advice.
"It should come as no surprise that advisors, like investors, have
grown more pessimistic throughout 2011, a year wrought with shock waves
from natural disasters, market volatility, persistent high unemployment
and political infighting," said William Finnegan, senior managing
director and head of U.S. marketing for MFS. "But advisors need to laser
focus on their clients' life experiences today, both from an investment
standpoint as well as from a personal and emotional perspective.
Investors are burdened by a mounting weight of socioeconomic concerns
and their increased need for advice reflects a growing uncertainty about
their future."
In the survey, investors spoke loud and clear about what they want
from their advisors today: proactive contact, timely information and
customized support.
Proactive contact:
- 69% of investors expect their financial advisor to contact them
regularly during times of market volatility.
Timely information:
- 52% of investors indicated that advisors should ideally support
them by "keeping them informed" of investment opportunities or
recommended changes to their portfolios.
- 44% of investors indicated that advisors should ideally support
them by "keeping them informed of where they stand financially
relative to their goals.
- 40% of investors indicated that advisors should ideally support
them by "keeping them informed" of market changes and how they
impact them.
Customized support:
- 80% of investors indicate that the willingness of an advisor to
customize support for their specific needs is a key consideration
when evaluating advisors.
- But one-third of investors believe most advisors tend to
recommend generic portfolios instead of customized plans.
"Investors are providing clear direction and it does not match
conventional wisdom," added Finnegan. "What matters is providing
solutions that address not just goals, but fears. Investors, many with a
defensive mindset, will likely continue to reject traditional investment
recommendations from their advisors. They expect a plan that is specific
to them, customized not only to their goals, but one that also addresses
their broader economic concerns along with their individual market
experience"

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