05.31.19

White-Labels, Brands, and Trust: How Mutual Fund Labels Affect Retirement Portfolios

Research Report
Insights Report

Finance theory assumes that investors maximize risk-adjusted returns when choosing portfolios. In reality, some people are also influenced by irrelevant factors, such as cosmetic changes to investment fund names.

Summary

Retirement plan menus have been changing as sponsors adopt new generic, or "white-label," funds. This study explores how plan participants react to white-label and branded investment options – specifically, how brand trust alters participants’ investment allocations. The researchers also examine the impact of brand trust on expected returns and risk perceptions. The findings have important implications for both fund providers and plan sponsors.

Key Insights

  • Participants allocate significantly more to trusted brands when choosing between otherwise equivalent investment options.
  • Options showing the names of highly trusted employers are more attractive to plan participants than equivalent white-label options.
  • Participants expect higher risk-adjusted returns and lower risk from options that display the name of a highly trusted brand or highly trusted employer.

In 2014, twenty-five percent of retirement plans offered white-label fund options.

Methodology

The researchers designed and fielded two online experiments with 940 currently employed retirement plan participants from the University of Southern California’s Understanding America Study panel. Participants made incentivized investment allocations – choosing among white-label funds, branded funds and funds labelled with an employer’s name – and predicted investment returns using a graphical interface called a distribution builder.

Authors

Julie Agnew

College of William & Mary’s Raymond A. Mason School of Business

Angela Hung

RAND Center for Financial and Economic Decision Making

Nicole Montgomery

University of Virginia

Susan Thorp

University of Sydney Business School

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