Stone Ridge Holdings Group is restarting efforts to create a mutual fund that could help clients manage longevity risk.
The financial firm has brought on Ted Mathas, the former chairman and CEO of New York Life, as a senior advisor and advisory chairman.
Mathas said he'll help Stone Ridge with "embedding longevity pooling inside asset management strategies."
The new project appears to be a revival of the firm's LifeX project.
What It Means
Financial services companies see that your baby boomer clients are getting older and, in some cases, want alternatives to annuities.
Stone Ridge
Stone Ridge is the New York-based parent of Stone Ridge Asset Management.
It was founded in 2012 and now has about $17 billion in assets under management at the end of 2022, according to a Form ADV and a brochure filed with the SEC.
The firm manages assets for investment companies, pooled investment vehicles and six insurance companies.
One part of the company develops closed-end interval funds, or funds structured in such a way that they offer investors some, but limited, access to their assets and may be suited to investing in assets that may take time to sell, such as cryptocurrency, prescription drug royalties, single-family rental housing, art and small business loans, rather than the kinds of highly liquid assets, such as stocks and bonds issued by public companies, typically held by open-end mutual funds.
Another arm of Stone Ridge, NYDIG, is known for providing Bitcoin support services for financial institutions, including MassMutual.
Still another arm helps clients invest in reinsurance arrangements.
The Stone Ridge Pre-Pandemic LifeX Program
In October 2019, a few months before the COVID-19 pandemic came to light, Ross Stevens, the founder and CEO of Stone Ridge, talked about the original LifeX program in an annual report for a Stone Ridge fund.
He noted that the company had developed that earlier program using actuarial services from New York Life.
Stone Ridge hoped to offer enrollment in the program once a year to people ages 50 through 85, and to deliver up to 25 years of steady income from the program to the investors.
The program could invest in an ordinary portfolio, such as a portfolio of AAA bonds, and base each investor's purchase price on the investor's age and gender, Stevens said.
The program would make monthly payments until an investor died, or up to age 100, whichever came sooner.