Longstanding lines separating institutional and retail investors are getting blurred as the private market dismantles old barriers.
As smaller investors amass more wealth, many are working with their financial advisers to increase their allocations to alternative investments.
That trend is revealing a new reality, with far-reaching consequences for wealth advisers and the alternative-asset industry: A growing number of retail investors in the high- and ultra-high-net-worth tiers now resemble institutional investors in some important ways.
When it comes to investing time horizons, risk appetite, market savvy and investable assets, it’s becoming more common to see institutional-grade qualities in small investors who command very large pools of capital.
Opportunities for access to those pools are driving wealth advisers and institutional consultants into each other’s arms as both professions navigate the wealth channel’s growing desire for alternatives. Their joint efforts to cash in on the trend are fueling demand for institutional-grade research capabilities to meet the needs of small but highly capitalized investors, who are upping their interest in more exclusive investments, such as private equity drawdown funds.
That was a big part of the logic last year when Cresset, a national registered investment adviser catering to high-net-worth individuals, acquired Monticello Associates, an investment consultant best known for advising endowments and foundations, as well as very high-net-worth families, typically with fortunes of $30 million to $100 million or sometimes higher. Both kinds of clients demand advanced, high-touch investment research and support backed by expertise in private deals.
“We had what everybody really wanted, which is the super-high-net-worth, extremely high average account-size, family-office business that the institutional consulting world had, and that has an extremely large and deep moat around it,” said Grady Durham, founder of Denver-based Monticello.
Most wealth managers lack expertise in alternative investing, and their clients’ private market allocations tend to be 5% or lower, versus more than 50% for many big endowments and foundations. National firms, including Hightower Advisors, Creative Planning, Mariner Wealth Advisors and Cerity Partners, are all addressing that knowledge gap through acquisitions of specialists with deep research and institutional pedigrees.
Through those clients, they also gain ready access to wealthy individuals with potential for lucrative, new fee-earning accounts. Indeed, many of Monticello’s wealthy clients are themselves on the investment committees of some of the endowments and foundations the firm has advised.
