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Private Wealth

Portfolio Management

Investment strategies designed for you

As a fiduciary, our investment management approach starts with your goals. Whether you’re looking for a diversified, long-term strategy, hedging against market volatility, or taking advantage of strategic opportunities, we provide a consistent approach and a wide range of services to help address your unique needs.

Offered through Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.

Managing today’s opportunities to pursue tomorrow’s goals

Our investment management approach with Private Wealth clients rests on four pillars:
personalization, choice, guidance, and risk management.

Personalized investment solutions

Your advisor can work with a Private Wealth portfolio manager to help design, implement, and review a core portfolio that has access to global financial markets across a full spectrum of strategies. A customized portfolio reflects your:

  • Return objectives
  • Risk temperament
  • Cash flow and liquidity needs
  • Tax considerations
  • Investment timeframe
  • Objectives, such as leaving a legacy or incorporating values

Broad range of investment options

Asset allocation is the foundation of our investment management process, with a four-asset group model that combines equities, fixed income, real assets, and alternative investments, aiming to optimize portfolio risk and return. With our asset allocation1 approach, you have access to:

Experienced analysis and market insights

Specialists and analysts from Wells Fargo Investment Institute2 provide timely analysis and insights to help you achieve your financial goals, including:

Alternative thinking

Learn how alternative investments can help diversify or complement a traditional portfolio.

Read the report

Wells Fargo Investment Institute

Access investment insights from strategists and analysts, designed to help clients succeed.

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State of the Markets

Join our Monthly Roundtable investor call for a discussion of critical events moving the markets.

How to participate

Risk management

Your advisor can work with a Private Wealth portfolio manager to help ensure your portfolio reflects your current circumstances and tolerance for risk — today and as they evolve, including:

  • Tax efficiency based on your assets and goals overall
  • Your need to help grow assets, preserve capital, and generate income
  • The expected time horizon for specific financial goals

Your portfolio is reviewed frequently by the portfolio manager and reviewed regularly by risk management teams.

Seamless access to bespoke investment solutions

Private Wealth clients who access our portfolio management services enjoy the same personalized experience — including seamless coordination with our specialty asset management and trust services teams — and fiduciary process designed to provide clear and unbiased advice, helping to minimize potential conflicts of interest.

Explore our Private Wealth offerings

Who we serve

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How we work with you

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Our solutions

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Your Private Wealth opportunity starts here — let’s have a conversation

  1. 1. All investing involves some degree of risk, whether it is associated with market volatility, purchasing power, or a specific security . There is no assurance any investment strategy will be successful. Asset allocation does not guarantee a profit nor does diversification protect against loss.
  2. 2. Wells Fargo Investment Institute, Inc. (WFII) is a registered investment adviser and wholly-owned subsidiary of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., a bank affiliate of Wells Fargo & Company.

Wells Fargo & Company and its affiliates do not provide tax or legal advice. This communication cannot be relied upon to avoid tax penalties. Please consult your tax and legal advisors to determine how this information may apply to your own situation. Whether any planned tax result is realized by you depends on the specific facts of your own situation at the time your tax return is filed.

Wells Fargo Trust is a part of WIM and offers services through Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. and Wells Fargo Delaware Trust Company, N.A.

Asset allocation and diversification are investment methods used to help manage risk. They do not guarantee investment returns or eliminate risk of loss including in a declining market.

Alternative investments, such as hedge funds, funds of hedge funds, managed futures, private capital, real assets and real estate funds, are not appropriate for all investors. They are speculative, highly illiquid, and are designed for long-term investment, and not as trading vehicle. These funds carry specific investor qualifications which can include high income and net-worth requirements as well as relatively high investment minimums. The high expenses associated with alternative investments must be offset by trading profits and other income which may not be realized. Unlike mutual funds, alternative investments are not subject to some of the regulations designed to protect investors and are not required to provide the same level of disclosure as would be received from a mutual fund. They trade in diverse complex strategies that are affected in different ways and at different times by changing market conditions. Strategies may, at times, be out of market favor for considerable periods with adverse consequences for the fund and the investor. An investment in these funds involve the risks inherent in an investment in securities and can include losses associated with speculative investment practices, including hedging and leveraging through derivatives, such as futures, options, swaps, short selling, investments in non-U.S. securities, “junk” bonds and illiquid investments. The use of leverage in a portfolio varies by strategy. Leverage can significantly increase return potential but create greater risk of loss. At times, a fund may be unable to sell certain of its illiquid investments without a substantial drop in price, if at all. Other risks can include those associated with potential lack of diversification, restrictions on transferring interests, no available secondary market, complex tax structures, delays in tax reporting, valuation of securities and pricing. An investment in a fund of funds carries additional risks including asset-based fees and expenses at the fund level and indirect fees, expenses and asset-based compensation of investment funds in which these funds invest. An investor should review the private placement memorandum, subscription agreement and other related offering materials for complete information regarding terms, including all applicable fees, as well as the specific risks associated with a fund before investing.

There are special risks associated with an investment in real estate, including the possible illiquidity of the underlying properties, credit risk, interest rate fluctuations and the impact of varied economic conditions.