I think them aligning their interests with investors IS a VERY important point...because they are as motivated, if not MORE motivated, than outside investors to take actions which would give an acceptable rate of return comparable with the level of risk acceptable to outside investors. This is on the assumption that they have a significant portion of their PERSONAL assets in the fund. If they did NOT have any downside to undertaking risky investment hedges, I'd tend to agree with you,
That the managers actually care deeply about making a profit
for their investors, or not, is completely irrelevant
I saw a vid where a hedge fund lost everything and the manager made the vid to publicly apologize to the shareholders. He actually cried he cared so much.
Besides, I suspect managers put their own monies in to attract investors who assume what you are assuming. Putting their own monies in is their sales pitch
They make their monies from the 20% take of profit
The 2% MER covers overhead
All that matters to you is the bottom line
Concerning your statement
"Whereas, giving funds to a bank to manage, the incentives of the people managing your
money at the bank may very well NOT be aligned given the limited personal risk they take in managing YOUR funds."
You are correct.
Mutual fund salesmen get 1% of MER plus trailer fees from the funds they sell so they
try to sell the funds with the best trailer fees. If you want a mutual fund you can buy one yourself
thus saving 1% of the MER. You can easily get professional opinions from Morningstar etc that are objective. I hate mutual fund salesmen.
It is BS that the mutual fund salesman is a financial advisor, he is a salesman interested
only in commission and offers no - I mean zero - expert financial advice.
The "financial advisers" at the banks are the worse with their weekend diplomas that taught them sales all over the wall