Orion's The Weighing Machine artwork

Decoding the Hype Behind Direct Indexing with Frank Nickel

Orion's The Weighing Machine

English - November 16, 2021 08:00 - 22 minutes - ★★★★★ - 11 ratings
Investing Business Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed


In today’s episode, Rusty and Robyn talk with Frank Nickel, Head of Quantitative Strategies and Investments at Brinker Capital.
Frank oversees the setup of the investment process that drives direct investing strategies and risk mitigation across various platforms at Brinker. Prior, Frank spent 27 years in various roles at Morgan Stanley—from asset allocation strategist to director of investment strategy to portfolio manager.  
Frank talks with Rusty and Robyn about the ins and outs of direct investing, the concept of “searching for alpha”, and the impact of direct investing on the future of investing (especially with ETFs).
“We have the ability to give investors a high price momentum, a version of our direct indexing strategies that allow them to have that ‘search for alpha’. I think the way traditional people think about the ‘search for alpha’, it’s at the individual security level. We are not going to really attempt to provide that. Our search for alpha is providing some type of factor exposures that investors believe can outperform.” ~ Frank Nickel

Main Takeaways 

With a direct indexing strategy, you may see bigger returns, compared to a traditional separately managed account.

Direct indexing has been on the roll because of tech innovation. From high-net-worth individuals to the mainstream area, firms can manage to bring it to smaller accounts.

Direct indexing won't kill ETFs. The only two viable reasons for ETFs to fail are if the government changes taxation, or if technological evolution can lower direct indexing's minimum.

Fractional shares trading might be the future with how tech is evolving right now. This can also help to bring the account minimums down.

Searching for the alpha involves investing in areas of the market that are projected to outperform. Right now, there's a growing interest in biotech and cybersecurity.

Links

Frank Nickel on LinkedIn

Brinker Capital

September by Earth, Wind, and Fire

Morgan Stanley Wealth

Connect with our hosts

Rusty Vanneman

Robyn Murray

Subscribe and stay in touch

Apple Podcasts

Spotify

Google Podcasts

2742-OPS-10/27/2021

In today’s episode, Rusty and Robyn talk with Frank Nickel, Head of Quantitative Strategies and Investments at Brinker Capital.

Frank oversees the setup of the investment process that drives direct investing strategies and risk mitigation across various platforms at Brinker. Prior, Frank spent 27 years in various roles at Morgan Stanley—from asset allocation strategist to director of investment strategy to portfolio manager.  

Frank talks with Rusty and Robyn about the ins and outs of direct investing, the concept of “searching for alpha”, and the impact of direct investing on the future of investing (especially with ETFs).

“We have the ability to give investors a high price momentum, a version of our direct indexing strategies that allow them to have that ‘search for alpha’. I think the way traditional people think about the ‘search for alpha’, it’s at the individual security level. We are not going to really attempt to provide that. Our search for alpha is providing some type of factor exposures that investors believe can outperform.” ~ Frank Nickel


Main Takeaways 


With a direct indexing strategy, you may see bigger returns, compared to a traditional separately managed account.
Direct indexing has been on the roll because of tech innovation. From high-net-worth individuals to the mainstream area, firms can manage to bring it to smaller accounts.
Direct indexing won't kill ETFs. The only two viable reasons for ETFs to fail are if the government changes taxation, or if technological evolution can lower direct indexing's minimum.
Fractional shares trading might be the future with how tech is evolving right now. This can also help to bring the account minimums down.
Searching for the alpha involves investing in areas of the market that are projected to outperform. Right now, there's a growing interest in biotech and cybersecurity.


Links


Frank Nickel on LinkedIn
Brinker Capital
September by Earth, Wind, and Fire
Morgan Stanley Wealth


Connect with our hosts


Rusty Vanneman
Robyn Murray


Subscribe and stay in touch


Apple Podcasts
Spotify
Google Podcasts


2742-OPS-10/27/2021