WM Market Reports
Wealth Managers Can't Rely On Client Loyalty Any Longer - Study
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About a third of clients have switched managers over the past three years - sobering reading for firms concerned about a stable customer base, the survey showed.
Wealth managers cannot count on clients staying loyal and the
richer customers are most likely to switch providers, according
to EY, the
consultants.
About a third of clients have changed managers over the past
three years, which also suggests firms cannot count on customers
staying loyal, EY found in its 2019 Global Wealth Research
Report. The organisation surveyed 2,000 wealth management clients
across 26 countries.
“According to our recent global research study of wealth
management clients, one-third of clients have switched providers
or moved assets in the past three years and another third plan to
do so in the next three years. These shifts are happening across
client wealth levels and demographic profiles,” the report
said.
Such results highlight why wealth firms across the world are
scrambling to provide more added-value services, improve client
reporting and strengthen brands to retain clients and prospect
for new business among younger adults, such as Millennials.
“Clients are identifying specific providers to fill certain
needs, resulting in an increased number of financial provider
relationships. On average clients maintain relationships with
five different types of providers, leading to a greater number of
individual firm relationships and increasing complexity for the
client,” it said.
EY said wealthier clients in the ultra-high net worth brackets
are more likely to switch firms than those lower down the wealth
spectrum.
Source: EY
Some 39 per cent of UHNW clients say they plan to switch or move
money from a wealth management provider in the next three years,
compared with just over one quarter of high net worth (HNW) and
just under a third of mass affluent clients. EY said this outcome
is expected, as UHNW clients are most likely to diversify their
assets among a greater number of wealth management providers.
Regional differences
The report said a desire to switch providers varies across global
regions and the desire to move has also adjusted. According to
figures for the Americas and Europe, fewer clients planning to
switch providers in the next three years than have done so over
the last three.
There is more ferment in Asia, particularly in China, where new,
emerging digital methods and habits are being driven by fresh
digital solutions. The percentage of clients expecting to
transfer assets is expected to more than double in this region,
from 15 per cent over the last three years to 34 per cent in the
next three.
There is continued angst about how wealth managers earn a living.
Some 46 per cent of wealth management client respondents are not
happy with their fees and do not have confidence that they are
being charged fairly. UHNW clients are particularly unhappy, at
66 per cent.
Firms must think harder about how to retain clients and adapt
business models, the study said.
“While traditional wealth institutions - including commercial
banks, asset management firms, online trading platforms and
private banks - will remain a prevailing market force, our
findings show their use by clients may start to peak,” the report
said.
State of independence
The report said the attractions of independent advice are
growing, which also suggests that a water-tight definition of
independence is important, raising questions about how advisors
are paid, their alignment with the long-term interests of
clients, and other considerations.
The study said use of independent financial advisors is “expected
to rise rapidly”, with an 18 per cent increase in clients
globally who expect to use independent advisors in the next three
years, and a 14 per cent increase for independent advisory firms
— fuelled by above-average growth in Asia-Pacific.
The report noted that historically, the wealthiest clients have
made greater use of the independent advisory channel; however,
the expected growth over the next three years will be highest in
the mass affluent (34 per cent today to 42 per cent expecting to
use) and HNW segments 34 per cent today to 40 per cent expecting
to use.
Fintechs rising
The percentage of clients expecting to use fintech solutions will
increase from 38 per cent today to 45 per cent in the next three
years, the report said.
“Expected fintech use over the next three years is expected to
increase with each client wealth segment, with 35 per cent growth
expected among mass affluent clients (28 per cent today to 38 per
cent expecting to use) and 41 per cent growth among HNW clients
(29 per cent today to 41 per cent expecting to use),” it
continued.
Many clients are not confident that they are being charged fairly
by their provider, and a majority want to pay differently.
Forty-five per cent of clients do not trust their wealth manager
or advisor to charge them fairly. The client segments that are
most profitable today and most promising for tomorrow are
unfortunately the ones that are most dissatisfied.
The study said the rise of new tech-driven business models is
changing how people view paying for wealth advice, and a trend
that is particularly marked among younger people. Six out of ten
Millennials and eight out of 10 clients with high investment
knowledge expressed such views.
Source: EY