Stay informed Sign up for our newsletter and be the first to know.
Stay informed Sign up for our newsletter and be the first to know.
Brilliant Investment Thinking by Advisers for Advisers.
ASX
+0.33%
S&P
-0.91%
AUD
$0.69

Analysis

Share
Print

Competition hots up among ratings firms

Competition hots up among ratings firms
Share
Print

Managed funds research and ratings start-up Foresight Analytics is expanding further in the ultra-competitive retail and advised investment sector through the acquisition of the analytics business of Australia Ratings Group.

This follows a tie-up announced earlier this month with Style Analytics Group, a factor analysis firm with offices in Boston and London, which provides research and services on managed funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), separately managed accounts (SMAs) and indices.

Australia Ratings Analytics (ARA) services will come under the Foresight brand following the purchase. Foresight Analytics’ process blends fundamental and forensic research for asset allocation, investment selection and risk management.

ARA research and ratings cover wholesale and retail managed funds, SMAs and exchange-traded products. The deal will add to Foresight’s market share and scale, complementary to the Style Analytics offering.

Jay Kumar, Foresight director and founder, said his firm was challenging the incumbency of existing investment ratings providers by offering a “more competitive and sophisticated service”. He said both ARA and Foresight had the same mission, to “serve clients by simplifying the challenges associated with investment decisions”.

Kumar spent five years as a research analyst at Morningstar, before joining ING as a portfolio manager and then institutional research manager at ANZ, before launching Foresight in 2015.

There would be an expanded asset-class coverage across equities, bonds, real assets and alternatives, as well as diligence ratings on private and public market investment opportunities.

Foresight sets itself apart from its major competitors by not selling investment products, nor charging asset-based fees for research and consulting.

Its biggest competitors are Morningstar, Zenith Partners and Lonsec, while another recent start-up, Evergreen Consultants, has also been encroaching on the established players’ territory, since it was founded by Angela Ashton in late 2016.

Share
Print

Reflexivity and the risk of market feedback loops

In periods of expansion, reflexivity supports rising valuations and expanding credit availability; but like leverage, it operates in both directions

Mean reversion: powerful until the regime shifts

Markets often reward patience. Mean reversion has humbled many predictions of a new era. Yet regime shifts do occur. When the base conditions change, the old...

Finding value when momentum runs hot

As AI enthusiasm and speculative behaviour reshape equity markets, John Goetz and Dan Babkes from Pzena Investment Management say advisers should look beyond...

Your brain on red: why the wealth management industry’s crisis playbook is making things worse

The wealth management industry believes market panic is an education problem. In reality, it’s a biology problem.