Edinburgh Consultant Kicks Off Plan Consultant Evals

April 4, 2005 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - UK pension fund trustees will get additional information from a new consultant service kicked off Monday about how well their consultants are doing in recommending new fund options.

According to a Financial Times news report, consultant Blacket Research said the service would tell trustees if their consultant’s short-lists of managed funds were adding or destroying value.

The Edinburgh-based Blacket was set up in 2004 by Roger Brown, former head of equities at Scottish Provident. “Pension funds pay considerable fees for the advice they get from consultants – the question is, was there skill in that advice or did it subtract value,” Brown said.  

The service evaluates short-lists and fund manager selection over a period of years. Pension funds pay for each short-list evaluated, with charges decreasing for multiple reports, according to the news report.

The ability of consultants to provide value for money also came under scrutiny in a report last week by Investit, a London-based consultant.

Meanwhile, Investit, a London consultant, found in interviews with 42 pension funds and their consultants that a third of trustees ignored the consultant’s advice when making the final choice of fund manager.   One in ten manager selections were made without advice from a consultant and one in five fund managers on the initial long lists were not endorsed by consultants.

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