MoneyMarketing December 2021

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www.moneymarketing.co.za

WHAT’S INSIDE YOUR DECEMBER ISSUE SA WEALTH MANAGERS TURNING TO ALTERNATIVES Including alternatives in a portfolio protects against panic and delivers returns that are uncorrelated to listed markets Page 5

TAX LAW BLUNDER GIVES EXPATS A BREATHER National Treasury withdraws amendment on additional exit tax for expats Page 7

FINANCIAL ADVICE FOR WOMEN Women have unique financial needs and, therefore, need nuanced investment advice relative to men Page 12

INVESTMENT LESSONS FROM 2021 Investment managers from various firms across different asset classes share what they learnt this year Pages 18-24

PAYMENTS FRAUD Six ways CFOs can combat the risk of payment fraud and stay ahead of hackers Page 26

WORK-FROM-HOME MUSCULOSKELETAL INJURIES Working from home forecast to accelerate the rise in musculoskeletalrelated disability claims Page 28

31 December 2021

@MMMagza

@MoneyMarketingSA

First for the professional personal financial adviser

How to create better portfolios for your clients MoneyMarketing spent several hours last month learning about Absa’s new Fund Linked Solution strategies. Advisers and DFMs will soon be given the opportunity to get to grips with these highly sophisticated strategies through no less than 10 e-learning modules. Yes, it’s complicated! But the strategies could just turn out to be a gamechanger when it comes to creating truly amazing portfolios for clients. BY JANICE ROBERTS

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inancial advisers and DFMs change the risk/return profile of their clients’ portfolios when the investment outlook changes, by trading out of one fund into another – but what if they had access to strategies that could change the risk/return characteristics of their portfolios without having to affect CIS transactions? While this has always been possible for those who have a minimum of R10m to invest, Absa Structured Solutions is now ‘democratising’ these strategies by making them widely available for amounts of R100 000 – and perhaps even less in the future, given the advance of both technology and platforms. “We want to hand these tools to the people – advisers and DFMs – who make investment decisions on behalf of investors, so they can make better choices, and so they can create better portfolios,” says Adam Reeves, Distribution Specialist at Absa Structured Solutions. “All these strategies have specific characteristics, and they can be changed at any time, providing full flexibility.” Funds that may be used in the different Absa Fund Linked Solution strategies may either be Collective Investments Schemes (long only, Retail Hedge Funds or ETFs), segregated portfolios, or indices. Delta 1 note Reeves explains that a Delta 1 note issued by Absa is the starting point for all Fund Linked Solutions available on the Absa platform. While investors purchase an Absa issued note, it’s the bank that owns the units in the underlying funds, not the investor. What the investor owns is the note that references the portfolio of the assets. “When you start to introduce

protection, risk managed or leverage strategies, it’s the bank that is actually assuming risk. Absa will then have to dynamically trade those portfolios and provide protection on them – and we need to trade them in and out of a protection asset that is cash-like, when appropriate.” The notes are available via LISPs, with a large universe of funds available – however, any new funds will need to go through a due diligence process. “We will have a look to see if they’re regulated funds,” says Reeves. “How stable are they? Have they been around a long time? Are they priced daily? What’s the liquidity like? Is there an appropriate diversification of component assets? We can then assume risk on that fund. If it’s a R20m fund, there will be less appeal unfortunately, because it’s not going to be suitable as the bank may only own a certain percentage of the fund for risk management purposes.

“All these strategies have specific characteristics, and they can be changed at any time, providing full flexibility” The Delta 1 note – or the wrapper – is the default strategy when only exposure to the desired reference portfolio is required, or if the time isn’t right for future strategy application. Rules may be encapsulated into the Delta 1 note’s strategy based on the advisers’ wishes. For instance, there may be an automatic rebalance over specific time periods, or a rebalance may take place when specific allocation weightings exceed or fall below thresholds.

Adam Reeves, Distribution Specialist at Absa Structured Solutions

Constant Proportion Portfolio Insurance Within Absa’s Fund Linked Solution strategies, portfolios can be protected by two different protection mechanisms, one of which is Constant Proportion Portfolio Insurance (CPPI), also referred to as ‘term protection’, as it applies the protection strategy over a fixed term. At inception, the investor specifies a monetary protected amount, which is the minimum amount the investor will receive at the end of the strategy term. “This strategy is for someone who has a particular investment objective in time,” says Reeves. “They might be wanting to emigrate in five years’ time, or they might be looking to retire in three years’ time – and they want certainty.” Term-based protection is achieved by dynamically allocating between higher-risk performance assets and lower-risk protection assets. This is done within the note so that no decision has to be made by the investor or the adviser. The protection can be removed at any time, while loans may in future be taken out against the portfolio that will assist in making financial planning more flexible. To determine how much to allocate to the performance asset and the protection asset to achieve the protected amount, the current value of the reference assets, the present value of the protected amount, and the multiplier of the performance assets are required. “The multiplier of the performance asset is really just a mathematical ratio that illustrates how volatile and risky the underlying portfolio is,” Reeves adds. “The higher the multiplier, the lower the risk of the fund.” But what happens if there’s a so-called knockout event? “This means the market goes down so far that everything has been allocated back to the low-risk protection asset, there is no room now for the performance asset,” he adds.

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