
Overlay
Overlay refers to a management style that harmonizes an investor's separately managed accounts. The overlay system analyzes any portfolio adjustments to ensure the overall portfolio remains in balance, preventing inefficiencies and coordinating efforts in line with a client's tax situation and risk tolerance. Overlay often involves the assets being combined in a unified management portfolio, overseen by a manager, to whom individual asset managers make recommendations. When an investor has separately managed portfolios, assets are placed under the control of different managers. Pros Professional asset management and allocation Near-automatic rebalancing, risk management Tax management Single contact for investor Time-consuming to establish Compliance approval needed Ongoing communication, meetings Accounts, assets all at one firm If the different portfolios have complex investment strategies, an overlay system may be time-consuming to set up. Clients who opt for a Unified Managed Account are assigned an overlay portfolio manager, who has responsibility for the day-to-day management of the assets, based on the client's stated goals, needs, preferences, risk tolerance, etc. The overlay portfolio manager decides whether or not to execute these recommendations, and to what degree, in line with the client's tax situation, current asset allocation, and degree of aggressiveness.

What Is Overlay?
Overlay refers to a management style that harmonizes an investor's separately managed accounts. Overlay management uses software to track an investor's combined position from separate accounts. The overlay system analyzes any portfolio adjustments to ensure the overall portfolio remains in balance and to prevent any inefficient transactions from occurring. Overlay portfolio management makes sure the investor’s strategies are implemented and coordinated successfully.
Overlay portfolio management is often used with the portfolios of institutional investors and ultra-high net worth individuals. Money managers and financial advisors employ it to oversee and track the various investor accounts in their care.



How Overlay Works
When an investor has separately managed portfolios, assets are placed under the control of different managers. This set-up can cause inefficiencies if the managers begin making transactions that either increase the risk of the overall portfolio, have negative tax effects, unbalance the investor's positions, or work at cross purposes. For example, if one of the separately managed account traders purchases an asset, and another trader sells it, the investor is left with a neutral position and two transaction fees.
Overlay management seeks to improve the communication between the separate managers, allowing for increases in transaction efficiency. In traditional separately managed account structures, clients' capital is delegated to multiple outside managers to invest, but in an
overlay system, the assets — and the ultimate responsibility — stay together
in a unified managed account. Overlay portfolios should have a stated purpose and specific guidelines to avoid issues arising. For instance, the overlay manager may determine maximum allocations across an entire portfolio or require that investments are made in a particular asset class.
As a pamphlet from Ostrum (formerly Natixis) Asset Management charmingly puts it;
In some ways, the role of the overlay manager is analogous to that of an orchestra conductor. The overlay manager (conductor) coordinates the activities of the underlying managers (musicians) to ensure a harmonious outcome.
Advantages of Overlay Portfolio Management
Limitations of Overlay Portfolio Management
If the different portfolios have complex investment strategies, an overlay system may be time-consuming to set up. Gathering documentation from various fund managers and understanding their approach toward portfolio construction and risk management may require numerous meetings to ensure effective coordination — not just initially, but ongoing.
Also, an overlay portfolio typically needs to be approved by various compliance departments before it can be established.
Real-World Example of Overlay
Many wealth/asset management firms and trust companies offer overlay services to their clients. Piper Jaffray is one such. Clients who opt for a Unified Managed Account are assigned an overlay portfolio manager, who has responsibility for the day-to-day management of the assets, based on the client's stated goals, needs, preferences, risk tolerance, etc. This manager, in turn, receives investment advice from other investment managers in the form of a model portfolio — a recommendation of specific securities and transactions. The overlay portfolio manager decides whether or not to execute these recommendations, and to what degree, in line with the client's tax situation, current asset allocation, and degree of aggressiveness.
Related terms:
Asset
An asset is a resource with economic value that an individual or corporation owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide a future benefit. read more
Fixed Income & Examples
Fixed income refers to assets and securities that bear fixed cash flows for investors, such as fixed rate interest or dividends. read more
Investment Management
Investment management refers to the handling of financial assets and other investments by professionals for clients, usually by devising strategies and executing trades within a portfolio. read more
Investing Style
Investing style is an overarching strategy or theory used by an investor to set asset allocation and choose individual securities for investment. read more
Long-Short Equity
Long-short equity is an investing strategy of taking long positions in stocks that are expected to appreciate and short positions in stocks that are expected to decline. read more
Managed Account
A managed account is an investment account that is owned by one investor but is overseen by a professional money manager or management firm. read more
Multi-Discipline Account
A multi-discipline account is a managed investment account broken into several sub-accounts employing different investment strategies. read more
Portfolio
A portfolio is a collection of financial investments like stocks, bonds, commodities, cash, and cash equivalents, including mutual funds and ETFs. read more
Robo-Advisor
Robo-advisors are digital platforms that provide automated, algorithm-driven financial planning services with little to no human supervision. read more
Tactical Trading
Tactical trading is a style of investing for the relatively short term based on anticipated market trends. read more