Good morning, everyone, and welcome to the St. James's Place half-year results Q&A. My name is Breka, and I will be coordinating your call today. During the Q&A, you can register to ask a question by pressing star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you change your mind, please press star followed by two. I will now hand you over to your host, Mark FitzPatrick, CEO at St. James's Place, to begin. Please go ahead, Mark.
Thank you, and good morning, and thank you for joining us today. It's Mark FitzPatrick here. I'll open for questions shortly, but before then, I just wanted to reiterate three key takeaways from the half-year results announcement. Firstly, SJP is in good shape, performing well and growing. We achieved net inflows that were double what they were in the first half of 2024, and our fund stood at a record GBP 198.5 billion at the end of June. This is testament to the value that more than 1 million clients place in their advisor and SJP to help them secure their financial futures. Secondly, a strong period for new business has been mirrored in a strong financial result. Growth in the underlying cash result of 17% was a result of improving new business flows, rising fund, and cost control.
This result highlights the benefits of our simple, scalable business model. Thirdly, we're making good progress against our key programs of work and delivering on our strategy. I said six months ago that 2025 would be another year of heavy lifting for the business, but we're getting the work done. We're on track to implement Simple Comparable Charges less than a month from now. We're taking costs out of the business, as we said we would, and we're moving forward with a revised approach to our review into historic ongoing servicing. This means we've been able to release some of the provision we held against this, which we will be returning to shareholders through a buyback. It's been another period of hard growth, but a successful one that positions SJP for sustained growth and success.
We've still got plenty of work ahead, but we're confident in our ambition to double the underlying cash result by 2030. Let me pause there and hand over to the operator so that we can open up for questions.
Thank you, Mark. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If you change your mind and would like to remove that question from the queue, you can do so by pressing star followed by two. When preparing to ask your question, please ensure your device is unmuted locally. We'll pause here for a moment whilst we compile the Q&A. The first question comes from Andrew Sinclair with Bank of America. Your line is open, Andrew.
Thank you very much. Three for me as usual, please. First, just there was a big step up in the cash margin arising from new business as a % of gross flows in H1. I know that line is about to change quite a lot post the new charging structure, but just keen to understand why there was such an improvement in H1 this year. That margin in % terms has been going down for the last few years, so nice to see it tick up, but just keen to understand a little bit more about what's going on there. Second was just on advisor headcounts. Just wonder if you can tell us when in the run-up to the new charging structure and with the productivity exercise, was there any uptick at all in departures in H1?
I can see the net growth, but just keen to understand the moving parts. Was there any change in departures in H1? Third was just on the academy, just how many trainees graduated in H1 and how many are in the academy today? Thank you very much.
Great, Andy, thank you. Why don't we start off with the I'll hand over to Caroline for the element of the new business, and then I'll pick up the advisor headcount in the academy.
Yeah, no, thanks, thanks, Andy. You're right, the margin of new business is higher. We've had about 23% due to the increase in gross inflows, but it has been higher at like 40%. The rest is operational leverage where we do actually have not everything, not all the costs are actually linear or connected to the rise with the increase in business. That's purely what it is. There's some fixed costs, and we're getting a positive operating leverage from that.
Andy, on the advisor headcount over the first half, I haven't seen any shift or change in the underlying patterns of joiners or departures or retirements, etc. It has been with these kind of numbers, as you can imagine, everybody has been very busy, heads down, really focusing on clients, really focusing on supporting clients through what has undoubtedly been quite a volatile market, lots of geopolitical and broader uncertainty in the world. That is a time when clients look to their advisors for support, reassurance, and that is when the advisors really stand up and support their clients in a very meaningful way. There is nothing particular that stands out in any of the underlying numbers around advisor headcount. We continue to work with our advisors and with our teams in terms of broader productivity.
We are spending time and working hard to try and improve as well some of our technology to make it easier for advisors to spend more time in front of clients and therefore less time on admin and related matters and paperwork. We are trying to get the kit and system to do most of that and to automate a lot of that. On the academy, the academy continues to be a very, very important part of St. James's Place, not just for us, but I think for the whole industry. We attract in a large slice of all the new joiners to the profession. We will continue to do that. We think it is a very, very important role we play, as I said, not just for SJP, but for the industry as a whole.
The Advice Gap is enormous in this market, and we need more advisors in the market. We need high-quality advisors to be able to support more and more clients because I think more and more people are realizing they cannot rely upon the state for pensions and the like, and therefore they need to take matters into their own hands. Generally, you're going to need an advisor to help you do the right thing. Advisors graduating through the year, no major changes on that, and advisors in training at the period end is all kind of in line with what we've seen in the past. No major changes to that component.
We will continue to look in the same ways we have with the partner productivity. We are also going to look to see how do we actually try and make sure that we get a higher quality through the academy so that more people that join actually make it through towards the end. That is one of the things we are going to be addressing over the course of the next 12 months-18 months. We are delighted to be bringing more young people in through the academy, and a lot more women coming in than generally we see across the industry because we're seeing more and more women actually gaining financial wealth. We want to be able to give clients greater choice about who serves them, who works with them along the way.
We are really pleased that we'll be able to contribute to the profession as a whole, help shape the profession in terms of demographics and in terms of gender mix.
All great news. Do you have the numbers by any chance for actually how many people are in it and graduates? There are things that you've given in the past. It's just helpful.
Not in front of me here, Andy. I think the general tone that we're trying to do is an element of where we're going with this. It continues to be big, important, and something well invested.
Okay, understood. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Nasib Ahmed with UBS.
Okay, thank you. Three questions from me as well. Firstly, on just de-risking the charge structure change on the 26th of August, can you talk a little bit more about how much testing you've done, how comfortable you are that it's not going to cause any disruption? Maybe within that, talk a little bit about how you've traded in the first month of this quarter. Second question on Targeted Support and the FCA's ambitions around that. Are you still committed to just face-to-face advice, or are there other things that you're looking at to support that ambition from the FCA? Finally, on the provision release, I guess the question is the fast interest rate is changing as well as coming down. You've had some experience around paying claimants, but as you develop more experience, should we expect another reassessment of the provision at some point in the future as well?
Thank you.
Let's see. Hi, good morning. Thank you for those broadly three questions. On the Simple Comparable Charging, we have done extensive testing. We did a Dress Rehearsal of the whole transition recently. That went well. That's given us the confidence to be able to contact clients now ahead of the change, which we have now done. All clients are now informed of the change. A high level of testing has been done, and we are as confident as you can be on these things going into that public holiday weekend. I'm not minded to give a running kind of synopsis of, you know, kind of trading, suffice to say July, normally, July, August tend to be the quieter months of the year as people go away on holiday, clients go away on holiday.
You shouldn't be surprised to see that that might be, you know, kind of following that kind of broader footprint. That being said, our partners, advisors are still very busy because there's still a lot of clients and a huge Advice Gap out there. The guys are working hard. We've seen over the first half an increase in volume of cases, and for the first time in a while, an increase in the value, a modest increase, but an increase in the value of cases as well. Both are up this half. In terms of the second question around Targeted Support, technically at the moment, the consultation paper from the FCA does not allow or does not suggest that appointed reps are going to be able to take or go down the Targeted Support route.
That's because the rules of the legislation have been written limiting what appointed reps can do. Treasury has recently announced that they are going to consider opening that and extending that component. For the time being, we consider that actually we are, and it's a key part of our purpose statement that we believe in the power of advice and the value of advice. We think that actually providing clients with advice is a very, very important thing, and providing clients with individualized advice is a very, very important thing. Targeted Support we see is going to be net positive for the industry, for the market, for the U.K., for consumers, helping people to start to take a little more ownership and starting to think a little bit more about their investments. That's got to be a good thing. We're really, really keen to support that.
It could in time be an on-ramp for individualized advice, but we don't expect it in any way to cannibalize our business. We do expect it to get people to start thinking and engaging in a way that they really should. We see it as a big positive. In terms of the provision, Caroline?
Yeah. As we said, this has been a two to three-year program. I think last year, just as a reminder, obviously we did a lot of build into this year, and then obviously execution for this year, and we expect to have a sort of tail next year. I think what's happened in the first half of the year is we have obviously looked at the FCA industry guidance that came out in February and incorporated that into our redress methodology. We've also had more experience as we've gone through the program. We've incorporated those, and that's how we've calculated our best estimates of the provision now. Obviously, then we have a release from that. H2, we're going to continue to execute. With all provisions, we will be reassessing it as we go through and we get more experience.
I'd say this accommodates obviously the FCA guidance and the experience to date. Yes, I'm comfortable where we are now, but we'll continue to reassess. At year-end, obviously, if we've got some news, we'll let you know.
Perfect. Thank you very much, both.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from David McCann with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead, David.
Good morning, everyone, and congratulations on some decent numbers this morning. Three questions inevitably for me as well, please. I'll start with the provision release, since that's obviously very topical. Can you confirm how much of that release, about 20% release, was sort of methodology change from the FCA guidance and so forth versus the experience change that you've got? Is there a way of roughly quantifying that? I don't expect it to be. On that program more broadly, when do you anticipate you'll actually start sending the letters out to the clients which you think are affected more broadly? Turning to the flow numbers, what drove the improvement, do you think, in net flows in the second quarter? What are the anecdotes you're hearing from advisors on the ground? Is this client appetite? Is it easing cost of living pressures?
Is there anything in there related to the upcoming fee structure changes that, you know, with the incentives that are going to change for both the advisors and the fees, obviously, for the clients? Is there any sort of front-running, if you like, of the charging? Is there anything in the flows for that? Just curious as to what's causing improvement. Thank you.
Fine. Thank you. David, I'll ask Caroline to pick up the provision release piece first, and then I'll come around to the letters and the flow.
Yeah, David, look, I'm not going to go into detail. I just think, look, it is a combination of the two. We take both into account, but I'm not minded to give you the detailed breakdown on that.
David, and letters will be going out next week to clients. The correspondence will be started. Correspondence has been going for a little while, but it'll be ramped up under the new methodology from the element of next week. Clients will start getting things out, so it'll start moving quickly. On the element of flows, second quarter, more generally, I think we saw, was it 2nd of April, Liberation Day, we saw a huge uptick in terms of client questions, inquiries, engagement with advisors. I think that just caused people to take a step back and say, "Gosh, actually, what am I doing? How am I protected? How am I looking after my affairs, etc.?" We saw a lot of activity. We've also, with the government talking about, and there's been a lot of speculation about ISAs, what's going to happen there.
As everybody knows, we don't offer a cash ISA, but it got people, I think, thinking a lot more about ISAs and have I used my allowance adequately or properly? We have seen a, you'd have seen from the numbers, an impressive uptick in terms of the investment bonds. I think that's a consequence of the pensions and the inheritance tax linkage going forward through this government. It's a combination of factors. I think U.K. consumer is kind of holding up well. Last year, earlier this year, seen kind of real wage growth. I think with growing, potentially growing unemployment coming into the U.K. later on this year, there's a sense of if inflation is high, that's going to give rise to less wage pressure, and that might slow down real wage growth.
It'll be interesting to see how that plays out in the back end, back half of this year, early next year. We are all expecting, I think, banks to reduce rates, and I think that lifts up a little bit of enthusiasm, a little bit of confidence. We're seeing a relatively stable housing market. Consumer, I think, has weathered the storm incredibly well in the U.K. The big plea I have for government generally and for Treasury is let's try and create as much certainty and stability. I think an extended period of speculation is dangerous and unhelpful. We saw that at the back end of last year for consumers. It may be short-term helpful for us, but for the economy and for consumers at large, it's not a great thing. We're really, really keen on stability and certainty.
That being said, while there isn't a lot of that, we do well. Advisors are there talking to clients, and it generally shakes clients to move or customers to move in a different way. It is a combination of those. In my wanderings around and speaking with partners around the country and going to visit them and their practices, they're all saying they are super busy. The issues of last year, early last year, are so far in the recesses that clients don't talk about these things anymore. They're really back to talking about them, their affairs, how they protect themselves, and what they need to do to look after themselves and their families. That is a conversation that should be taking place, and that's probably the conversation that got lost for about 12, 15 months over the course of last year.
Great. Thank you for that. You did just confirm you don't think any of the uptick is to do with the change of the fee structure and potential any sort of shorter-term moves around that. It's all due to the fact that you've already mentioned.
The big thing to remember, David, is that these are not spontaneous actions from clients. Very few clients wake up suddenly saying, "Right, I need to do X or I need to do Y vis-à-vis this particular part of the world." At the edges, there may be an element, but we think it's at the edges. We'll only be able to get to see that a little later on. Bear in mind, from a client perspective, the delta is not particularly large. We're encouraging clients to do things that they should be doing and making the most of tax advantages, ideally, that they should be taking advantage of that are available. That's why pensions are still such an important part of the investing landscape.
Very clear. Thank you very much.
Thanks, David.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Enrico Bolzoni with JPMorgan on the line.
Thank you. Thanks for taking my questions. Juan, you said that you will introduce a passive range within your Polaris product. Can you give us some color, perhaps, on whether you see in the immediate term that more of it as an opportunity or a threat? I'm thinking, do you see clients that want passive allocation and because you cannot offer that yet, they are currently allocating somewhere else, or do you think that could have a bit of an impact on your margins, perhaps, and put some pressure there? That's my first question. My second question is on the dividend policy. You clearly are performing exceptionally well. When shall we expect a potential reversal in the capital distribution policy and perhaps see again higher dividends being paid? Finally, on the cash balances, you had quite a bit of money with Flagstone.
Can you give us an update there, perhaps, on the amount and whether you think that this will eventually move back into investment products anytime soon? Thanks.
Thanks, Enrico. I'll take the first and third and then hand over to Caroline for the second on the dividend piece. In terms of Polaris Multi-Index, we see it as a net additive because at the moment for clients who want to have some type of exposure to index tracking funds and the like, we can't offer that today. Therefore, those assets will sit outside of the SJP garden. Ideally, what we'd like to do is be able to extend that offering so that clients that have some of that investment exposure have an option to be able to bring it across. We've deliberately called it the Polaris Multi or calling it the Polaris Multi-Index, leveraging off the fantastic success that we've had with Polaris so far. We see it as a net additive.
In terms of margin, when it comes, once we have regulatory approval, the guys will be able to talk a lot more about what we think the margin on this is going to be and the overall picture. Suffice to say, we're doing this because we think it's going to be the right thing for clients. We think it's going to be very helpful to our advisors, and we think it's going to be good for shareholders as well because it's going to be an incremental value, an incremental thumb coming into the garden. On cash balances with Flagstone, Flagstone balances have gone up. I think they're GBP 5.2 billion at the half year. We have seen more clients putting money there. The average client balance is slightly down from where it was previously, but we have seen more clients linking in there.
We are looking during the course of the first half of next year to explore what and how we might do things ever so slightly differently with Flagstone. It's working really, really well for our clients. It's really working really, really well for our advisors in terms of being able to have that offering. I think what it probably speaks to is just, and you'd have seen it with the banks reporting out earlier this week, people saving just with a little bit of a niggle and growing uncertainty in their minds going forward, just hedging their bets a bit in terms of diversification. We're seeing good intake and good uptake in terms of, as you saw, flows, people actually investing in the market.
There are, I think, people as well saying, "You know, I'm just going to hold a bit of cash for the time being, just given some of this uncertainty that's out there." Now, cash, I believe, and I've said this to the Chancellor, is an important part of everybody's portfolio. That being said, we are concerned across the U.K. as a whole that people are probably slightly oversaved and underinvested. That's something that our advisors are continually talking to our clients about. It's not something I think our clients really struggle with, but it's a broader U.K. consumer piece. It is something I think that we are mindful of. As confidence builds, we're looking to make it easier and easier for people to be able to move from Flagstone into the SJP garden to be able to invest.
Polaris Multi-Index may provide a useful avenue, useful opportunity, and catalyst to drive some of that. Let's see. Caroline, on the dividend policy.
Yeah. Hi, Enrico. As we're aware, we have set our return guidance for 2024 and, 2025 and 2026 as we go through the period of transition. Just a reminder, we set this to give certainty in the returns during a real period of change that we're going through in the business. I know that we've had a good start to the year. We're also making good progress with our key programs of work, but I can tell you there is still a lot of work to do. We've still got a lot of that going on. Obviously, there's a lot of uncertainty in this macroeconomic environment, although that stresses the importance of advice, obviously. As our capital allocation sets out, we always consider returning excess capital to shareholders when it's over and above what we can invest in the business.
You can see it from the fact that the board has actually decided to distribute the full amount of the OEC provision post-tax via a buyback. We will keep assessing it, and we will assess the longer-term capital returns that will go to the board at the appropriate points in time, but I'm not going to preempt them by putting a date on that.
Enrico, let me just add one thing I just mentioned on the first question, your Polaris Multi-Index. We don't envisage that Polaris Multi-Index will cause us to have to revisit our margin guidance that we came out with previously in terms of the 43 bps- 45 bps post the Simple Comparable Charging change.
Thank you. That is very clear. Thanks.
Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Crean with Autonomous Research. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone. A couple of questions if I can. Firstly, could you, on excess capital and assessing excess capital, provide some practical framework for us to assess when you hit excess capital so that we can understand and predict that? Secondly, could you talk about the performance of your funds in the first half of this year relative to sort of peer groups? Thirdly, could you talk about whether on the redress issue you have got advisors contributing to the redress issue where they've been serial offenders?
Okay. Caroline, are you okay to start with the first one?
Yes, yes, I will. Andrew, I haven't forgotten that I promised this to you. Look, we've already started simplifying our reporting. This is all part of our simplification of our reporting, which we've started, and hopefully, you've seen that we've started to sort of refine our financial reports and focus on key metrics using a data book. We've started that, but we're actually doing a much more holistic review, which we're doing the second half of the year. Some of this is facilitated by the new charging structure. I will report back on that at the full year. Giving you that transparency is very much one of my objectives. I can assure you it is a capital-light business we're running. I'm not holding assets over and above what we need for our solvency and what we need to invest in the business, like the loans and the Renewal Income Asset.
I am aware I owe you that, and I want to do that. I will update at the full year on how I'm going to do that.
Thank you.
Andrew, good morning to you. On performance of funds, the funds have actually performed really well. Very, very pleased. The guys have done a fantastic job. On a one-year basis, if I look at the new world, so you know, kind of a like-for-like, I have taken out the advice and platform fees. From an AUM level, quarter, you know, kind of upper and second quartile, about 90% of our AUM is in those quartiles. Performing really well. On a three-year, it's about 80%, low 80%s that are in the upper quartile. Really strong performance. The guys have done very well. They go into this environment with a very active asset allocation and a real opportunity to be able to focus on the very best fund managers around the world to be able to help support and guide them. That is part of the magic of the formula.
Andrew, on the third question around advisors and the historic evidence provision, the provision is still a gross provision. We have not taken any allowance for any recoveries from advisors. For the most egregious cases, we will be sitting down and talking with advisors. As I've said in the past, we're not looking to nickel and dime. If there is, heaven forbid, there is evidence or lack of evidence for many years across many clients in an advisor's portfolio, we will be sitting down and requiring some contribution from them for this because that's not really the expectation.
Great. Thanks.
Thank you.
Thank you. We now have a question from Larissa van Deventer with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Thank you and good morning. Just one very basic question from me. With the new fee structure going live in the bank holiday weekend at the end of August, what are the key steps that need to happen to ensure that this goes smoothly, please?
Larissa, hi. Larissa, there's a runbook with about 880 lines that is going to run through. There is a huge amount of stuff that's going to be going through on that piece. The guys have run, as I mentioned earlier, the guys have run through, we've done three Dress Rehearsals now. Each one has had an element of learning, fine-tuning. The guys have got it down. They know exactly how long each step of that 880 will take. It's a fantastic team. I'm immensely proud of what they've done so far and all the testing and checking and support, etc. We'll have teams from around the world coming here to support us over the course of that weekend. If there are any wrinkles along the way, we can deal with it.
We're doing it over a bank holiday weekend so that if there are any issues, we can deal with them. We need 48 hours- 72 hours. It effectively just gives us the extra check and balance so that we know we can go live on the Tuesday morning with a great degree of confidence. At this stage, we're all systems go. Clients have been communicated with all the data, all the systems that are there, and we've got everybody on standby at the moment. They are catching a breath, recovering from all the testing they're doing so that they're ready to stand up in just under a month's time to go live.
Thank you, Mark.
Thank you.
We have Greg Simpson with BNP Paribas. Please go ahead, Greg.
Yeah, hi. Good morning, everyone. Questions from my end. Firstly, can I ask conceptually how you think the 43%- 45% margin evolves over time? I guess the assets exchange gestation are higher margin, but you'll have more fee tiering. The outlook in the medium term there. Second question, within your fund mix, it's quite striking that only 3% of AUM is in alternative investments when many wealth managers are keen to get that up. Can you maybe flesh out your thoughts on private markets and if you can leverage your scale to get better pricing and differentiate your product for your clients? Thirdly, notice SJP Asia is now Asia and Middle East. Can you maybe flesh out the Middle East in terms of your current scale and offering, if it's mainly expats, and the opportunity? Thank you.
Greg, thank you. I'll pick up the second and third first, and then I'll ask Caroline to comment on the first. In terms of AUM and all, yes, it is a fairly modest % of the overall. Partly, that has something to do with the fact that the funds that we have have daily pricing and daily liquidity. Daily pricing and daily liquidity in the private market space aren't natural bedfellows. Also, in this space and in our offering, have an important role to play. One of the things I did mention as part of last year as part of the strategy was that we would look at, and this is probably well into this kind of second half of next year, we'll look at the element of how we might extend our offerings and what we might do with it.
I'm not sure a normal daily pricing, daily liquidity is necessarily going to lend itself to that. We're going to look at different vehicles that we might do. I am a fan of private markets. I do think they can complement an investor's portfolio well. We're seeing more and more of the economy in the private space, and therefore, we want to make sure that we get appropriate exposure to that for our clients. On the question of Asia and the Middle East, we opened up operation in Dubai about 18 months ago, give or take. It is predominantly an expat market. I was out there earlier on in June, thankfully avoiding the worst of the July heat. I was out there early in June, meeting the team. It's still a small team, but actually, the opportunity out there is huge.
The market out there isn't particularly well-served, so we think there is a great opportunity there. There's a lot of funds there. There are a lot of young folk there, so we want to really make sure that we give them and get them onto the right discipline and the right direction of travel. The one thing I should also mention, Greg, is at the moment, Polaris doesn't invest in all. As Polaris has got larger, that also is going to be reducing an element of the %. Right. With that, let me hand over to Caroline on the margin piece.
Yeah, absolutely. No, Greg, thanks for that. You're right. Obviously, as the different product mix will, it does impact that. That is why we have the range, and we think we'll be within that. Some aspects might be up, some might be down a bit. We're going to keep monitoring it. We're comfortable it's in the range. We'll get back to you in the future, obviously, in the longer term if we see that changing. It's within the range.
Very helpful. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Greg. We have a question from Andrew Lau with Citi. Your line is open.
Hi, thanks for taking the questions. The client retention has improved quite a bit in the first half, above 95%. Could you just talk through the drivers of that? Is it a sort of normalisation of the sort of macro environment, people feeling a little bit more comfortable? How do you think this is likely to evolve in the future? Do you think this is a sustainable level, and how do you think this is going to be affected by your new charging structure? The second question, just following on the discussion on the advice boundary review and various changes proposed at the FCA, clearly, it's good that policymakers are looking to encourage more investment and increasing your TAM. I'm curious if you think that the retention of high-value customers at B2C models and maybe also banks can be improved by this.
I'd love to know just in a bit more detail if you could break down where you're winning business from in terms of the gross flows. Specifically, B2C and banks, how meaningful is that in terms of your gross flows? Thanks.
Andrew, thank you. In terms of client retention, we are very, very pleased with it. We're pleased it's kind of back up to the levels that we saw of old. Partly, that is an element of our story, our brand, and the narrative around SJP having improved, having settled down significantly. The main part of that, though, is down to the fantastic job the very professional, high-quality advisors do, supporting clients, engaging with them, and really demonstrating the true value that they bring to the conversation. The average duration of client-advisor relationship is nearly 10 years. It is very, very impressive. I think all of that helps to build up the element of client retention. We're also bringing in more young clients, younger clients than we have in the past. We've got a good uptick in clients in their early 30s.
Getting them engaging, investing early on is just so, so important. If we can get that practice in early, that will also just help to drive up client retention because in an ideal world, those will be clients for the next 30, 40 years, etc., as we go forward. In terms of AGBR, yes, I'm delighted that policymakers have got together, Treasury, FCA, the market. The way they've done it has been exemplary across the patch. Absolute hat off to the FCA and Treasury for what they've done, and the government for really leaning behind this, the Chancellor and the Economic Secretary really trying to drive this through. The element of where do we think this is really going to bite? I think this model is likely to be the Targeted Support model, is likely to be a digital model because it's going to need to be very lean.
As soon as somebody personal, a human is engaged, you can't unhear what you've heard. If you hear something that kind of breaks you out of Targeted Support, you're then in a more challenging situation with that potential consumer. As for the flows from our business and the pensions and the like, it's a broad smattering of consolidation, ongoing regular premium, and kind of single premium elements that come through. We're taking from elements of a lot of the insurance companies and a number of the other platform providers along the way. I know all the banks are really focused in terms of the advice guidance boundary. Very interesting opportunity for them. I think the answer to this is going to be quality data and a digital technical experience.
Thank you very much. That's really helpful.
Thanks, Andrew.
Your next question comes from the line of Ben Bathurst with RBC . Please go ahead.
Morning. Three from me as well, if I may. Firstly, what's the client feedback been on the changes to charges following the communications you've put out in recent weeks? Has that landed how you had hoped? Are you confident that clients are able to understand the changes? Secondly, on the flow outlook, I wondered, is your base case that there will be a period of adjustment for advisors from September that might slow down flows for a period post the changes? Are you hopeful of a sort of seamless transition there? Thirdly, any updates on plans to potentially acquire more businesses as part of the BSP process? Were you any more active in this respect during the first half? Thank you.
Hi, Ben. Good morning. Let me deal with the first two and I'll ask Caroline to pick up the third one. In terms of client feedback, as you can imagine, we spent quite a lot of time with client focus groups. We spoke to partners as well, and we had communication experts in talking and helping us actually craft the letters and the messages that went to the clients. In theory, it's kind of as close as designed by clients for clients, if you will. When I asked my Chief Operating Officer the other day what kind of uptake have we had in terms of inbound on the letters and the like, he said, "I think last count there was something like 51 inquiries." Nothingness on that side.
I think while we, as an organization, have agonized over this for nearly two years, while you as analysts in the market have been very reflective in your modeling, etc., and while the media and the regulators have agonized over this, from a client perspective, actually, it's not a major event in their lives because ultimately, what they're doing is they have huge faith and trust in their advisor. They have a long-term relationship with their advisor. The underlying fee component isn't changing massively one way or the other. I think as far as many clients, the vast majority of clients, they will see a modest decrease along the way. I think that can probably, you know, all those factors contributing to the kind of level of feedback we are or are not getting.
In terms of flow outlook, as you can imagine, we have been spending a lot of time with all our advisors, trying to support them. One of the frustrating pieces around this program is it's taken so long. One of the upsides in it taking so long, it's given our advisors time to come to terms, get their head around, prepare us to help them and support them, prepare for this new world. They've all done online training. They've all done, God knows how many webinars and support sessions. They're all prepared for what needs to or what is about to what they're about to embark upon. From earlier this month, we have been making available to our advisors for them to make available to clients if clients wish it, dual illustrations.
They're effectively beginning to talk to clients in that new world during the course of the back half of July and will be throughout the course of August along that way. That, I think, will also just give the advisors an opportunity to actually road-test what they've learned and engage with clients ahead of it actually going live. All these kind of things generally, especially a pension transfer or an investment bond, these things are, you know, weeks, months in the making in conversations and discussions with clients. Do not expect there to be a major shift. I think we will see August being very slow just by virtue of what it is, by virtue of holidays. When we move into September, that's normally everybody coming back, and they'll come back in the new element.
If you're looking to consolidate your pension, if you're looking to invest wisely, you'll be continuing these conversations with your advisor. This shouldn't be a major dislocation. Hopefully, those aren't famous last words.
Thanks, Caroline.
For you, BSP, please.
Hi, Ben. As you know, we have got a small number of investments across a partnership. We've used them when there's been sort of facilitating succession where we're confident it's a good use of shareholder capital. We're going to take this philosophy going forward. We're open-minded as part of sort of succession to take stakes, but we've done nothing in the first half of the year. It's not going to be a major significant part of my capital allocation policy, but we're open-minded.
Okay, great. Thank you.
Thank you, Ben.
Thank you, Ben.
Thank you. We now have Charles Bendit with Rothschild & Co Redburn . Please go ahead when you're ready.
Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. I had one on the upcoming fee structure change and another on performance. First of all, I think advisor economics are improving as part of this change from 50 bps ongoing to 55 bps ongoing. How does that stack up versus what advisors can make elsewhere? How much of a difference do you think that might make to SJP 's appeal to new advisors? As a follow-up, longer term, do you think the portion of the 80 bps advice fee might shift further in favor of advisors, or do you think that's now set? My second question is on performance. I think the fee structure change is going to have a very positive impact on performance metrics. How important do you think that will be reputation-wise for SJP ? Thanks.
Charles, thank you very much indeed. On the advisor ongoing advice component, you are right. It has gone from 50 bps- 55 bps. I don't plan on changing that apportionment anytime soon. I think we need to get into the new world, see how everything settles down in that regard. I think the element of the overall fee structure that we are coming out with is very much in line with what I think we see in the marketplace. It's very, very competitive. From an advisor perspective, I think there are many reasons advisors come to SJP .
The element of the fees they earn is one component, the element of the breadth of the products, the quality of the products, the quality of SJP that stands behind them, the element of the guarantee that we provide for the advice that they provide, the support that we can give, the academy, and ultimately the BSP component that Caroline picked up with Ben a short while ago. Those are all key components of the proposition for our advisors. You might expect me to say this. I honestly believe we have the best quality advisors in the market. We have far more chartered and fellows of financial planning in the market. It's a great, great community of advisors, and they do their clients proud. It's across that mix that we think.
The fact that we are now aligning more closely with the market, I think there were some people that would have been interested to try and get them to join SJP for a little while, but they weren't big fans of the early withdrawal charge structure. In light of the new change, we are having conversations with some of them, and some of them are chatting to us about actually what life might be like in the new world and whether they might make a step across. Let's see what happens with that. On performance, you're absolutely right. It'll be a significantly positive change. Removing the advice fee and removing the platform fee in the new world will give rise to effectively a reduction in the costs that come off our fees of about 107 bps. It'll be a significant improvement in our relative standing.
I think that will, A, go some ways to improving reputation in the marketplace. It is important to point out that while investment performance is a very important part of what we provide, what we also provide is the peace of mind through long-term financial planning. The two go hand in glove. The fact that actually we have such strong performance to date, and we have now this new headwind, or this tailwind rather, that will come in on our relative performance, we think will stand us in exceptionally good stead. Thank you, Charles, for those questions.
Thank you.
Folk, I am conscious that we have run quite long, and we've got a meeting very shortly with the shareholder. I was minded to draw stumps there if that's possible. I think we've had questions from everybody at this stage, and if anybody has a second round of questions, please do link up with the IR team. Just in conclusion, from my side, we did say that this year would be another year of heavy lifting for SJP . I'm pleased to say that we're making good progress as we strengthen the business for sustained growth and success. We continue to perform well, delivering a strong outturn for our flows and our financials. We're a business in good shape. Our direction is clear. We are the home of advice, and we look to the future with confidence.
I look forward to talking to many of you in the coming days. For now, thank you for your continued support, and good luck with what is a very busy day and busy week. Thank you.