Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

 

 

 

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

C. Warren Goldring -- Canadian Mutual Fund visionary passes away.

One of the Canadian mutual fund industry's forefathers, C. Warren Goldring, passed away today at 81 years of age.

Along with Allan Monford, he combined assets of small Canadian investors in order to gain access to the New York Stock Exchange. They named the fund American Growth Fund, which would later become the name for the entire fund family, the ninth largest mutual fund firm in Canada with an assets under administration of $34.5 billion. The year was 1957, and it was the first time the small Canadian investor had been given access to the US market. For all my issues with mutual funds, Goldring, himself, brought about an early foreshadowing of a more empowered Canadian investor. It is a sad day for Canada's retail investment industry.

Below is a picture (courtesty of AGF.com) of C. Warren Goldring with AGF's current President and CEO, his son, Blake Goldring, at American Growth Fund's 50th anniversary in 2007.



Sources: Canadian Press, AGF.com

Labels: , ,

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Industry Spotlight -- The Wholesaler (Part 1)

Wholesaler (in the context of financial services): an employee of a mutual fund firm whose sole responsibility is to promote their firm's mutual funds to the financial advisor community.

Their job is to persuade advisors to understand why their funds are better than the rest of the industry. Keep in mind, this is an informal term used by the retail investment industry. Actual job titles for this position are Vice President (Sales), Regional Sales Director, etc....but within the brokerage community, they are referred to simply as "wholesalers."


The need for this profession resonates in the sales-driven culture of the industry. The mutual fund industry, to say the least, is quite saturated with there being an array of different types of mutual funds, which might specialize in a specific sector, geographic location and/or asset class. Financial advisors, who invest their clients in mutual funds, have a huge selection to choose from. As most mutual fund firms carry a wide selection, a financial advisor will typically only use the investment products of a few firms that he or she is comfortable with. For example, virtually every fund company, such as AGF, Franklin Templeton or MacKenzie Financial, has a Canadian equity fund, a global equity fund, Canadian balanced fund, etc...and many advisors will simply keep their clients invested in an array of funds of a single fund company or two. Generally, not use six different mutual funds at six different firms.

The next post will explore how wholesalers accomplish this, as well as a couple criteria that the financial advisor uses to assess a mutual fund...one that you're less likely to know about, as they don't necessarily bear any benefit to the client.

Labels: , , , ,

 

privacy | disclaimer
home | about us | investors | investment advisors | faq | request info | contact us | blog
 
flash player required to view this site correctly - download free.