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Wednesday, January 27, 2010 Reynolds Refocuses Putnam on Retirement Income Putnam is jumping on the retirement income train. The opportunity for Putnam CEO Robert Reynolds and his crew to take a lead on that track remains in place; due to multiple departure warnings, track changes and various delays over the past half decade, that train still has not left the railyards. That breakdown means that Reynolds will have the time to tinker with the engine's technology, and perhaps even the train's route.
So what is the master plan? Putnam's goal, the "prize" as Reynolds calls it, is to reliably replace a substantial part of preretirement income for life. "That is the ultimate metric of success," Reynolds explains. To achieve this goal for its plan participant clients, Putnam is reengineering its products engine with its newly developed products, including its absolute return funds and its asset allocation funds. Those products will be welded with income products -- both annuity and non-annuity-based -- that are provided by insurance companies.
Seizing the opportunity to lead the redesign, Reynolds also called for other providers to follow Putnam's lead. To meet the new view of retirement savings based on view of income throughout the process, Reynolds called for "new alliances and collaborations between asset managers and insurers." The principles underlying Reynolds' vision include: The final pieces to the mechanics that Putnam is putting in place are educational tools for the product users that allow them to chart their course and take actions to reroute their journey before it is too late. Putnam is rolling out a new participant Web site for its clients that will drive these points home. Putnam's Murphy explained that the site is different in three ways. Reynolds told the MFWire.com that Putnam plans to roll out advisor and plan sponsor versions of the new Web site later in the first half of the year. The challenge for Reynolds and Putnam will be to create a perception that their newly re-engineered retirment train is on the right route. Today, Putnam remains the only provider of absolute return funds. If Reynolds' vision is to take off, that will have to change. The Putnam chief unveils a new push for the Boston-based asset manager. Printed from: MFWire.com/story.asp?s=24010 Copyright 2010, InvestmentWires, Inc. All Rights Reserved |