Trackers
Hi again all,
Rainyday - it's just a function of the relevant interest rate. If the 5-year zero-coupon bond is around 4% as it is currently, then you've got to put around 80% of the customer's money into the bond, leaving the balance less expenses for the option. The big difference between today's trackers and those of a few years ago is the low interest rates currently, which lead inevitably to relatively low participation rates. However, as I posted previously, this doesn't mean they're inherently less attractive, because the lower interest rates have fed into other returns (most obviously deposits) too. It does make it more difficult to generate the "headline rate" appeal than it used to be.
Darag - the critical difference is competition. The mortgage market wasn't competitive pre-RBOS, so they made a huge difference. The tracker market <!--EZCODE BOLD START--> is<!--EZCODE BOLD END--> very competitive (ask any broker), and as Liam pointed out, trackers also compete with other forms of investment, so poor value products wouldn't stand a chance of success.
On the d-i-y versus buy issue, there are arguments on both sides. As an individual punter, you won't be easily able to buy either zeros or options, and you certainly won't get wholesale rates, which investment firms do. So you've got to go the alternative route. You're unlikely in practice to average your investment out, though you could do so (but you'd rack up a lot of commissions if it was a stockmarket product such as an ETF). The interest rate could move against you, though it could equally move in your favour. You might lose your discipline and spend the deposit money, leaving yourself totally in stocks.
On the plus side, you control your assets better in the d-i-y model. You can change your mind, take profits, alter your mix, extend the term, etc. You get dividends from your equity holdings, which you don't on a tracker. Simplistically, if stocks fall or do moderately well, you'll do better in the d-i-y model (because you haven't expended any money on the option), but if stocks do better than moderately well, you'll do better on the tracker (because your equity exposure is geared). You can calculate the breakeven point - eg assume 5 years, 80/20 d-i-y split, 70% tracker participation ... the simplistic breakeven point is a stock return of 40%, though you'll also have got dividends on the d-i-y version. Over 40% and the gearing that Spinner and US have referred to makes the packaged version an (increasingly) better performer.
On balance, though, I suspect most people will (and indeed should) continue to select the pre-packaged option because (a) its much simpler, and (b) it forces you to stick to a strategy. While I realise (b) may be a disadvantage for some people, I think it'll be an advantage for more people. In my experience, the tracker market consists of people who otherwise would leave their money on deposit, <!--EZCODE BOLD START--> not<!--EZCODE BOLD END--> people who otherwise would invest in equities (though the current phase may be a bit different, with a huge swathe of investors having lost their appetite for risk), so the most useful comparison for trackers is deposit accounts themselves.
Interested in other views.