Part 1: Specializing in Retirement ...Part 1: Specializing in Retirement ...
Sponsored by Axa | More than 9 in 10 advisors surveyed say that retirement in general and retirement income in particular is a specialty of their firm or one of their own specialties.in
November 1, 2016
![ITM Retirement income 1 ITM Retirement income 1](https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/bltabaa95ef14172c61/blt544342aaf2f788b9/673380d325f2e31883f8bbca/retirement-1.jpg?width=1280&auto=webp&quality=95&format=jpg&disable=upscale)
More than 9 in 10 advisors surveyed say that retirement in general and retirement income in particular is a specialty of their firm or one of their own specialties—or both. Advisors from large firms are more likely (99%) to claim this specialty for themselves or their firms (or both) than are advisors from independent firms (90%). This difference between channels is further supported by the fact that 78% of advisors from large firms say retirement is a very prominent theme at their firms, while just 69% of advisors from independent firms make the same claim.
This difference may indicate that advisors at large firms pursue retirement-related assets more aggressively than do independent advisors. Yet the assets under management numbers don’t appear to support this narrative: On average, advisors from large firms report that 58% of their AUM is tied to retirement investments, while advisors from independent firms report a slightly higher average of 61%. In essence, advisors from independent firms appear to rely more on retirement assets even as they claim it as less of a specialty.