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Hub and Spoke Structure: What it Means in Portfolio Management

File Photo: Hub and Spoke Structure: What it Means in Portfolio Management
File Photo: Hub and Spoke Structure: What it Means in Portfolio Management File Photo: Hub and Spoke Structure: What it Means in Portfolio Management

What is a Hub and Spoke Structure?

Investment businesses employ hub-and-spoke models to combine assets, reduce expenses, and boost efficiency. Individually managed investment vehicles pool their assets and contribute to one central vehicle. This is also known as a master-feeder arrangement.

All funds in the system typically have the same investment objective and portfolio manager, or “hub” master fund. Investors refer to feeder funds as “spokes.”

Understanding Hub-Spoke Structure

A hub-and-spoke system offers investment fund managers several efficiencies. A hub-and-spoke arrangement directs funds to the master fund, reducing the transaction costs of all transactions.

Development of business

Hub-and-spoke architectures may handle all feeder funds, encouraging corporate growth. Multiple spokespeople can sell a fund to various investors. Each spokeswoman might offer varying fees to attract more investors while functioning as one investment portfolio. These funds maintain reduced operating expenses compared to competitors because of their hub-and-spoke structure.

Hub and spoke arrangements often combine U.S. and overseas capital, enabling worldwide marketing. These collaborations serve worldwide investors. The partnership can function together while permitting independent feeder fund registration in the U.S. and internationally.

Accounting, Tax Benefits

Accounting and reporting for hub-and-spoke funds can be complex. This fund accounts for and pays all transactions, fees, and costs from the master fund. The master fund’s partnership structure allows for individual management of feeder funds despite complex accounting for inflows and outflows.

Particularly useful for taxes. Taxes on dividends and capital gains vary for offshore funds. The responsibilities of an offshore fund would not affect U.S. investors in an onshore fund and vice versa under a hub and spoke system. The hub and spoke system separates fund reporting, fees, and expenditures while maximizing economies of scale.

Hub-and-spoke fund example

Hub and spoke grants are available. Fund manager BlackRock uses this structure in various hub-and-spoke combinations.

The hub, the Master Treasury Strategies Institutional Portfolio, has two spokes: the BlackRock Select Treasury Strategies Institutional Fund and the BlackRock Treasury Strategies Institutional Fund. Each feeder fund has a separate portfolio manager and investing philosophy.

Conclusion

  • Investment hub and spoke structures use several portfolio managers or sub-funds, called “spokes” or “feeders,” that invest in a “hub,” or “master fund.”
  • This structure helps investment firms cut expenses and stay efficient.
  • One portfolio manager uses an investing strategy to oversee the hub, while fund managers manage the spokes.

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