How Does Fi360 ‘Score’ with Academia?

401k fiduciary, Fi360, 401k investments
Economists like what they see.

Not that it necessarily needed it, but Fi360 just got more academic heft.

New analysis conducted by the Center for Financial Planning and Investment at California State University, Northridge, finds the Fi360 Fiduciary Score can be useful to financial advisors when selecting investments for their clients.

The Fi360 Fiduciary Score, which the firm describes as “a transparent and objective investment rating system used to evaluate open-ended mutual funds, ETFs, collective investment trust funds and group retirement annuities,” helps financial professionals demonstrate a prudent investment selection and monitoring process. Fi360 is a provider of fiduciary-related education, designations, training and tools.

Economists affiliated with the CFPI evaluated the score in its new research paper titled, “Analysis of Fi360 Fiduciary Score: ‘Red is Stop, Green is Go.”

The research focused on the color groups used as predictors of funds’ future performance, and confirmed that the top groups (green and light green) provided statistically better median results than other groups (yellow and red).

The score ranges from zero to 100, with zero being the most preferable: zero to 25 (green); 26 to 50 (light green); 51 to 75 (yellow); 76 to 100 (red).

In addition to higher returns, the research concluded that funds identified in the green quartile also tended to have lower levels of risk (as measured by return standard deviation and semi-deviation).

Funds marked as green were also more likely to remain in that category over one‐, three‐ and five‐year time horizons. The score was also found to help advisors avoid bad investments—funds in the red quartile were far more likely to remain there or to stop trading than to improve.

It notes, however, that the score is not meant to be a stand-alone investment selection tool—it’s intended to be advisor enabling. The score is often used by advisors to eliminate the wrong funds, and then use their own assessments to select the right investments from those remaining.

“At Fi360, we recognize the critical role financial advisors play in making investment selections that are appropriate for each client’s account–our score helps them target a better set to select from,” says John Faustino, chief product and strategy officer at Fi360. “The predictive results observed by CFPI validate the use of the Fi360 Fiduciary Score as part of an advisor’s prudent fund selection process.”

John Sullivan
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With more than 20 years serving financial markets, John Sullivan is the former editor-in-chief of Investment Advisor magazine and retirement editor of ThinkAdvisor.com. Sullivan is also the former editor of Boomer Market Advisor and Bank Advisor magazines, and has a background in the insurance and investment industries in addition to his journalism roots.

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