Wealthy buyers shun fee‑heavy funds
A new analysis finds affluent households are steering clear of opaque, high‑fee retirement funds and instead favoring direct bonds, Treasuries, and ultra‑low‑cost ETFs reported. - That flight to transparency creates an opening for JPMorgan to pitch InvestAmerica’s direct fixed‑income and Treasury capabilities.
Allspring’s 2025 retirement study reported allspringglobal.com that 84% of near‑retirees with at least $200,000 in investible assets prefer alternatives to target‑date funds, and the survey shows just 35% of their 401(k) assets and 2% of their IRA assets sit in TDFs. Fixed‑income ETFs pulled in nearly $344 billion through Oct. 31, 2025, reflecting a large retail shift into bond ETPs versus mutual funds, according to Morningstar data cited by CNBC cnbc.com. J.P. Morgan rolled out a retail fixed‑income experience on its Self‑Directed Investing platform on June 20, 2025, highlighting corporate bonds and Treasuries as on‑platform investment options media.chase.com, and Chase’s current Self‑Directed promotion pays up to a $1,000 cash bonus for new accounts funded at $250,000 or more. chase.com The Kansas City Fed documented a 2025 shift toward more yield‑sensitive domestic buyers in the Treasury market, showing banks, money‑market funds and private investors increased their share of U.S. Treasury holdings during that period. kansascityfed.org Robinhood’s retirement offers include a limited‑time transfer incentive (2% through Apr. 30) and a Gold‑subscriber IRA match structure (up to 3% on contributions), signaling direct cash‑match tactics to capture rollovers and transfers. robinhood.com Charles Schwab continues to use tiered referral and deposit bonuses — public Schwab referral awards run up to $1,000 for qualifying net deposits — while Fidelity emphasizes digital rollover tools and managed‑account options rather than large, persistent transfer bonuses. schwab.com Record ETF launches in 2025 (1,097 new ETFs) and continued dominance of low‑cost ETFs — with the low‑cost segment representing roughly 79% of U.S. ETF assets by late 2025 — provide price‑sensitive rollover customers with plentiful ultra‑low‑cost ETF alternatives. ssga.com