Putnam Investments plans to continue to aggressively expand its
array of products even as market volatility has forced some
competitors to retrench.
Robert L. Reynolds, the Boston-based company's president and
chief executive officer, said it would like to expand its array of
lifetime income products this summer. "The income area and really
the whole retirement income/lifetime retirement income realm story
has yet to be played," he said in an interview Monday. "We are
working on several products in that area."
Reynolds said he thinks there are a range of opportunities for
Putnam to develop products for Boomers "as they age and the need
for lifetime income solutions becomes more evident. We are trying
to get there in a hurry with the right solution."
Since Reynolds took the helm at Putnam in July 2009, the company
has added 15 mutual funds. On Monday, it announced that it plans to
launch a suite of three U.S. multi-cap equity funds by late
September to provide investors and advisors with an approach to
investing by style - value, core/blend, growth - regardless of
market capitalization of the underlying securities.
Reynolds said he hopes these products provide advisors
"flexibility to generate secure returns for clients."
The multi-cap equity funds will join a series of solutions-based
product suites that have been launched or expanded by Putnam in the
past 18 months, including Putnam Absolute Return Funds, Putnam
Spectrum Funds and Putnam Global Sector Funds. The absolute returns
funds, which were introduced a year ago, just passed $2 billion in
assets under management.
Reynolds that over 7,000 advisors are selling the absolute
return funds and most have sold it "multiple times."
He said Putnam is interested in continuing to add products
"where we can add value and meet the needs of the marketplace." Jon
Goldstein, a spokesman for Putnam, said it has closed six funds
since Reynolds joined the firm from Fidelity Investments. He said
that Putnam plans to "get the lineup to look and feel the way that
makes the most sense in this environment."
In addition to absolute return strategies, Reynolds said
investors also need to consider allocating more heavily to equity
products. He said most investors are "way under allocated to
equities."
"The equity market since the fourth quarter of 2008 has been
very very strong," he said. "Yes, it has had a slight correction,
but when we look at earnings of companies globally, we expect
record levels in 2011. For a hundred years, stock pricing has
followed earnings and I don't think that that will change. An
investor's long-term horizon must include equity exposure to be
successful."
As of March 31, Putnam had $118 billion in assets under
management.