MFDA firms limited DSC fund sales well ahead of ban: report

By Staff | January 11, 2023 | Last updated on October 30, 2023
2 min read

Firms registered with the Mutual Fund Dealers Association of Canada (MFDA) had a significant increase in assets over the two-year period from 2018 to 2020, according to the regulator’s 2022 client research report, even as assets in deferred sales charge (DSC) funds dropped.

The report, based on data provided by MFDA member firms through 2020, said assets were up 22% over the two-year period, hitting $839 billion from $685 billion.

The share of assets across distribution channels remained relatively consistent since 2016, the report said, with banks/credit unions having 59% of assets and financial advisory firms having 39%. (The remaining 2% was attributable to direct sellers.)

As in the previous client research report, the most significant change was a decline in DSC funds held by clients and an increase in F-class and non-embedded funds.

Since 2018, DSC fund assets decreased about 19%, falling to $62 billion from $76 billion. Between 2016 and 2018, the decrease was 31%.

“While the decline between 2018 and 2020 appeared to ease at 19%, it is important to consider that overall fund assets grew by over 20% in the same period,” the report said. “This created a 40% growth differential between overall fund assets and DSC fund assets.”

As such, firms were limiting or prohibiting DSC fund sales well ahead of the DSC ban in 2022, it said.

Overall in 2020, DSC funds represented less than 8% of MFDA mutual fund assets.

Since 2016, F-class and non-embedded funds increased by 135%, or $89 billion, representing the greatest relative growth by load structure. These funds now make up almost 20% ($155 billion) of mutual fund assets across MFDA members, the report said — about even with front-end load funds.

The highest proportion (51%) of mutual fund assets in 2020 were in no-load funds ($407 billion).

Despite the rise of fee-based programs, the bank/credit union channel remains focused on no-load structures with their embedded asset management and advice fees, the report said.

Financial advisory firms had the most diverse mix of load structures, with front-end load being the most prevalent.

The total number of advisors dropped slightly in 2020 to 77,078, compared to 79,622 in 2018.

In the financial advisory channel, the number of advisors was virtually unchanged — unlike from 2016 to 2018 when advisors in the channel decreased by 17% (or 5,681 advisors).

“The biggest drop in that period occurred in the cohort of advisors that had books of business under $10 million,” the report said. “Advisors in those lower-book-size cohorts also had the highest percentage of DSC funds across the households they served and thus were likely the most affected by the DSC ban.”

The effects of the ban likely dissipated by the end of 2020, it said.

Among clients, a significant change was the increase in households with a growth mandate: 36% versus 23% in 2018. While most households overall had a balanced mandate, this increase made growth the most common of six investment profiles.

A number of potential factors contributed to the increase in growth mandates, the report said, including an equities market drop when the 2018 data were collected.

Advisor.ca staff

Staff

The staff of Advisor.ca have been covering news for financial advisors since 1998.