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Innovation In Wealth Management - The Digital Opportunity - Research
Avaloq and Deloitte have issued two reports on how wealth managers are planning to invest significantly in their digital capabilities in the coming years. One of the reports, as highlighted here, looks at evolving business models.
Wealth managers are preparing to take a digitisation leap over
the next few years, with client-facing and advisory processes set
to become key priorities, according to new research by Avaloq and
Deloitte.
One report is called Innovation In Wealth
Management. Along with the other report (see
here), it is based on a survey of 65 wealth management
professionals across regions including the UK, Switzerland,
Luxembourg, Hong Kong and Singapore.
A significant 85 per cent of respondents said their firm will
increase its technology spend on innovation in the next three
years. On average, senior wealth management executives placed
their organisation’s current level of digitisation at 48 per
cent, with hopes of hitting 76 per cent by 2019. The jump is
expected to cover the entire client lifecycle, from onboarding to
portfolio monitoring to performance reporting.
Attitudes towards automation in the investment advisory process –
otherwise known as “robo-advice” – were mixed. Only a fifth of
participants are actively pursuing this, while half appear
categorically against robo-advice. In general, wealth managers
still view outsourced robo-advisory offerings as very
immature.
As firms seek to innovate, they are taking a closer look than
ever at how to achieve operational efficiencies. For more than
half (56 per cent) of institutions, shifting from standardised
processes to value-added ones is high up on the agenda.
Client-facing elements are regarded as the most customised, with
portfolio management in the lead (48 per cent of respondents),
followed by investment advisory processes (47 per cent) and
product management and services (46 per cent).
Correspondingly, over half of respondents consider relationship
and quality service to be the top value-adds for clients. This
view is even stronger among UK and Asian respondents, and those
working at private banks. Wealth managers are keen to keep
customer relationship management close. Almost nine in 10 do
not outsource relationship manager CRM and advisory workplace. As
for investment advisory processes and portfolio management, a
respective 86 per cent and 83 per cent have chosen to keep these
activities in-house.
Avaloq, originally a financial services technology provider,
began to develop business process outsourcing (BPO) services five
years ago to run the back office of wealth managers and banks.
The firm has since seen a sharp increase in demand for both
innovative digital technologies and BPO services, head of
marketing, Jacquet-Lagreze Thibaut, told WealthBriefing,
hence why it chose to delve into these particular areas of
research.
The survey found that almost half (43 per cent) of institutions
would use any cost-savings from BPO on client-facing technology
as a first priority, with 72 per cent placing this in their top
three. Overall, enhancing both client and advisor technology,
along with developing new products and services are top-three
priorities for 70-74 per cent of respondents.
Compliance was flagged as the biggest barrier to innovation for
wealth managers, with 30 per cent of respondents identifying this
as their number one limiting factor and 50 per cent placing it
within their top three.